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  1. docs/security/tls_configuration_history.md

    <a name="http2_naughty"></a>
    #### ² HTTP/2 Cipher Suite Denylist
    
    Cipher suites that are [discouraged for use][http2_denylist] with HTTP/2. OkHttp includes them because better suites are not commonly available. For example, none of the better cipher suites listed above shipped with Android 4.4 or Java 7.
    
    [OkHttp30]: https://square.github.io/okhttp/changelog_3x/#version-300
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  2. docs/en/docs/tutorial/response-model.md

    First let's see how editors, mypy and other tools would see this.
    
    `BaseUser` has the base fields. Then `UserIn` inherits from `BaseUser` and adds the `password` field, so, it will include all the fields from both models.
    
    We annotate the function return type as `BaseUser`, but we are actually returning a `UserIn` instance.
    
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  3. docs/en/docs/deployment/concepts.md

    In that case, it could be better to have only 2 servers and use a higher percentage of their resources (CPU, memory, disk, network bandwidth, etc).
    
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  4. docs/changelogs/changelog_4x.md

     *  New: Include suppressed exceptions when all routes to a target service fail.
    
    
    ## Version 4.4.1
    
    _2020-03-08_
    
     *  Fix: Don't reuse a connection on redirect if certs match but DNS does not. For better
        locality and performance OkHttp attempts to use the same pooled connection across redirects and
        follow-ups. It independently shares connections when the IP addresses and certificates match,
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  5. docs/en/docs/alternatives.md

        Then APIStar stopped to exist as a server and Starlette was created, and was a new better foundation for such a system. That was the final inspiration to build **FastAPI**.
    
        I consider **FastAPI** a "spiritual successor" to APIStar, while improving and increasing the features, typing system, and other parts, based on the learnings from all these previous tools.
    
    ## Used by **FastAPI**
    
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  6. docs/en/docs/python-types.md

    Calling this program outputs:
    
    ```
    John Doe
    ```
    
    The function does the following:
    
    * Takes a `first_name` and `last_name`.
    * Converts the first letter of each one to upper case with `title()`.
    * <abbr title="Puts them together, as one. With the contents of one after the other.">Concatenates</abbr> them with a space in the middle.
    
    ```Python hl_lines="2"
    {!../../../docs_src/python_types/tutorial001.py!}
    ```
    
    ### Edit it
    
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  7. docs/en/docs/tutorial/security/first-steps.md

    And if you click it, you have a little authorization form to type a `username` and `password` (and other optional fields):
    
    <img src="/img/tutorial/security/image02.png">
    
    !!! note
        It doesn't matter what you type in the form, it won't work yet. But we'll get there.
    
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  8. docs/en/docs/deployment/https.md

    ### TLS with SNI Extension
    
    **Only one process** in the server can be listening on a specific **port** in a specific **IP address**. There could be other processes listening on other ports in the same IP address, but only one for each combination of IP address and port.
    
    TLS (HTTPS) uses the specific port `443` by default. So that's the port we would need.
    
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  9. CHANGELOG/CHANGELOG-1.12.md

      - [Changelog since v1.12.9](#changelog-since-v1129)
        - [Other notable changes](#other-notable-changes)
    - [v1.12.9](#v1129)
      - [Downloads for v1.12.9](#downloads-for-v1129)
        - [Client Binaries](#client-binaries-1)
        - [Server Binaries](#server-binaries-1)
        - [Node Binaries](#node-binaries-1)
      - [Changelog since v1.12.8](#changelog-since-v1128)
        - [Other notable changes](#other-notable-changes-1)
    - [v1.12.8](#v1128)
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  10. docs/en/docs/release-notes.md

    That means that, for example, to apply authentication to all the *path operations* in a router it would end up being done in a different file, instead of keeping related logic together.
    
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