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  1. docs/throttle/README.md

    ## Examples
    
    ### Configuring connection limit
    
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  2. docs/security/README.md

    ### Server-Side Encryption with client-provided Keys
    
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  3. docs/kms/IAM.md

    setting the env. variable `MINIO_KMS_SECRET_KEY`. It expects the following
    format:
    
    ```sh
    MINIO_KMS_SECRET_KEY=<key-name>:<base64-value>
    ```
    
    First generate a 256 bit random key via:
    
    ```sh
    $ cat /dev/urandom | head -c 32 | base64 -
    OSMM+vkKUTCvQs9YL/CVMIMt43HFhkUpqJxTmGl6rYw=
    ```
    
    Now, you can set `MINIO_KMS_SECRET_KEY` like this:
    
    ```sh
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  4. docs/erasure/README.md

      -v /mnt/data6:/data6 \
      -v /mnt/data7:/data7 \
      -v /mnt/data8:/data8 \
      quay.io/minio/minio server /data{1...8} --console-address ":9001"
    ```
    
    ### 3. Test your setup
    
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  5. docs/sts/wso2.md

    Once WSO2 is up and running, configure WSO2 to generate Self contained id_tokens. In OAuth 2.0 specification there are primarily two ways to provide id_tokens
    
    1. The id_token is an identifier that is hard to guess. For example, a randomly generated string of sufficient length, that the server handling the protected resource can use to lookup the associated authorization information.
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  6. docs/federation/lookup/README.md

    points to the public IP address where each cluster might be accessible, this is unique for each cluster.
    
    NOTE: `mybucket` only exists on one cluster either `cluster1` or `cluster2` this is random and
    is decided by how `domain.com` gets resolved, if there is a round-robin DNS on `domain.com` then
    it is randomized which cluster might provision the bucket.
    
    ### 3. Test your setup
    
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  7. docs/bucket/lifecycle/DESIGN.md

    object for tiering. The data is moved to the remote tier in entirety, leaving only the object metadata on MinIO.
    
    The data on the backend is stored under the `bucket/prefix` specified in the tier configuration with a custom name derived from a randomly generated uuid - e.g. `0b/c4/0bc4fab7-2daf-4d2f-8e39-5c6c6fb7e2d3`. The first two prefixes are characters 1-2,3-4 from the uuid. This format allows tiering to any cloud irrespective of whether the cloud in question supports versioning. The reference...
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  8. docs/bucket/versioning/README.md

    Object locking enabled buckets have versioning enabled automatically. Enabling and suspending versioning is done at the bucket level.
    
    Only MinIO generates version IDs, and they can't be edited. Version IDs are simply of `DCE 1.1 v4 UUID 4` (random data based), UUIDs are 128 bit numbers which are intended to have a high likelihood of uniqueness over space and time and are computationally difficult to guess. They are globally unique identifiers which can be locally generated without contacting...
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  9. README.md

    ### Test using MinIO Console
    
    MinIO Server comes with an embedded web based object browser. Point your web browser to <http://127.0.0.1:9000> to ensure your server has started successfully.
    
    > NOTE: MinIO runs console on random port by default, if you wish to choose a specific port use `--console-address` to pick a specific interface and port.
    
    ### Things to consider
    
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  10. docs/bucket/notifications/README.md

      print("Connected with result code "+str(rc))
      # qos level is set to 1
      client.subscribe("minio", 1)
    
    def on_message(client, userdata, msg):
        print(msg.payload)
    
    # client_id is a randomly generated unique ID for the mqtt broker to identify the connection.
    client = mqtt.Client(client_id="myclientid",clean_session=False)
    
    client.on_connect = on_connect
    client.on_message = on_message
    
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