Search Options

Results per page
Sort
Preferred Languages
Advance

Results 901 - 910 of 1,183 for needm (0.07 sec)

  1. okhttp/src/main/kotlin/okhttp3/internal/-HostnamesCommon.kt

        // We've successfully read a group. Assign its value to our byte array.
        address[b++] = (value.ushr(8) and 0xff).toByte()
        address[b++] = (value and 0xff).toByte()
      }
    
      // All done. If compression happened, we need to move bytes to the right place in the
      // address. Here's a sample:
      //
      //      input: "1111:2222:3333::7777:8888"
      //     before: { 11, 11, 22, 22, 33, 33, 00, 00, 77, 77, 88, 88, 00, 00, 00, 00  }
    Registered: Fri Nov 01 11:42:11 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Mon Jan 08 01:13:22 UTC 2024
    - 11.2K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  2. android/guava-testlib/src/com/google/common/collect/testing/google/SetGenerators.java

          List<Integer> elements = newArrayList(elementsSet);
          /*
           * A ContiguousSet can't have holes. If a test demands a hole, it should be changed so that it
           * doesn't need one, or it should be suppressed for ContiguousSet.
           */
          for (int i = 0; i < elements.size() - 1; i++) {
            assertEquals(elements.get(i) + 1, (int) elements.get(i + 1));
          }
          Range<Integer> range =
    Registered: Fri Nov 01 12:43:10 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Wed Oct 30 16:15:19 UTC 2024
    - 15.6K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  3. src/main/java/jcifs/smb/SID.java

         */
        public SID ( String textual ) throws SmbException {
            StringTokenizer st = new StringTokenizer(textual, "-");
            if ( st.countTokens() < 3 || !st.nextToken().equals("S") )
                // need S-N-M
                throw new SmbException("Bad textual SID format: " + textual);
    
            this.revision = Byte.parseByte(st.nextToken());
            String tmp = st.nextToken();
            long id = 0;
    Registered: Sun Nov 03 00:10:13 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Sun Jul 01 13:12:10 UTC 2018
    - 14.9K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  4. helm-releases/minio-3.6.5.tgz

    include MinIO's own certificate with key `public.crt`, if it also needs to be trusted. For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for MinIO's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret generic minio-trusted-certs --from-file=public.crt --from-file=keycloak.crt ``` If TLS is not enabled, you would need only the third party CA: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret generic...
    Registered: Sun Nov 03 19:28:11 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Wed Apr 13 22:45:54 UTC 2022
    - 18K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  5. helm-releases/minio-4.0.1.tgz

    include MinIO's own certificate with key `public.crt`, if it also needs to be trusted. For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for MinIO's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret generic minio-trusted-certs --from-file=public.crt --from-file=keycloak.crt ``` If TLS is not enabled, you would need only the third party CA: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret generic...
    Registered: Sun Nov 03 19:28:11 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Mon May 02 06:10:34 UTC 2022
    - 18K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  6. helm-releases/minio-4.0.9.tgz

    include MinIO's own certificate with key `public.crt`, if it also needs to be trusted. For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for MinIO's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret generic minio-trusted-certs --from-file=public.crt --from-file=keycloak.crt ``` If TLS is not enabled, you would need only the third party CA: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret generic...
    Registered: Sun Nov 03 19:28:11 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Wed Aug 03 06:10:44 UTC 2022
    - 18.6K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  7. helm-releases/minio-5.0.11.tgz

    include MinIO's own certificate with key `public.crt`, if it also needs to be trusted. For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for MinIO's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret generic minio-trusted-certs --from-file=public.crt --from-file=keycloak.crt ``` If TLS is not enabled, you would need only the third party CA: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret generic...
    Registered: Sun Nov 03 19:28:11 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Wed Jun 21 19:29:09 UTC 2023
    - 20.3K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  8. helm-releases/minio-5.0.12.tgz

    include MinIO's own certificate with key `public.crt`, if it also needs to be trusted. For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for MinIO's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret generic minio-trusted-certs --from-file=public.crt --from-file=keycloak.crt ``` If TLS is not enabled, you would need only the third party CA: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret generic...
    Registered: Sun Nov 03 19:28:11 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Fri Jul 07 16:44:16 UTC 2023
    - 20.4K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  9. helm-releases/minio-5.0.13.tgz

    include MinIO's own certificate with key `public.crt`, if it also needs to be trusted. For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for MinIO's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret generic minio-trusted-certs --from-file=public.crt --from-file=keycloak.crt ``` If TLS is not enabled, you would need only the third party CA: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret generic...
    Registered: Sun Nov 03 19:28:11 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Sun Jul 09 07:13:05 UTC 2023
    - 20.3K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
  10. helm-releases/minio-5.0.7.tgz

    include MinIO's own certificate with key `public.crt`, if it also needs to be trusted. For instance, given that TLS is enabled and you need to add trust for MinIO's own CA and for the CA of a Keycloak server, a Kubernetes secret can be created from the certificate files using `kubectl`: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret generic minio-trusted-certs --from-file=public.crt --from-file=keycloak.crt ``` If TLS is not enabled, you would need only the third party CA: ``` kubectl -n minio create secret generic...
    Registered: Sun Nov 03 19:28:11 UTC 2024
    - Last Modified: Mon Feb 13 10:37:23 UTC 2023
    - 20.3K bytes
    - Viewed (0)
Back to top