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  1. docs/en/docs/advanced/openapi-webhooks.md

    This is normally called a **webhook**.
    
    ## Webhooks steps
    
    The process normally is that **you define** in your code what is the message that you will send, the **body of the request**.
    
    You also define in some way at which **moments** your app will send those requests or events.
    
    And **your users** define in some way (for example in a web dashboard somewhere) the **URL** where your app should send those requests.
    
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  2. docs/tr/docs/index.md

    ## Sponsorlar
    
    <!-- sponsors -->
    
    {% if sponsors %}
    {% for sponsor in sponsors.gold -%}
    <a href="{{ sponsor.url }}" target="_blank" title="{{ sponsor.title }}"><img src="{{ sponsor.img }}" style="border-radius:15px"></a>
    {% endfor -%}
    {%- for sponsor in sponsors.silver -%}
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  3. docs/en/docs/advanced/websockets.md

    ```
    
    </div>
    
    ## WebSockets client
    
    ### In production
    
    In your production system, you probably have a frontend created with a modern framework like React, Vue.js or Angular.
    
    And to communicate using WebSockets with your backend you would probably use your frontend's utilities.
    
    Or you might have a native mobile application that communicates with your WebSocket backend directly, in native code.
    
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  4. docs/en/docs/features.md

    ### Tested
    
    * 100% <abbr title="The amount of code that is automatically tested">test coverage</abbr>.
    * 100% <abbr title="Python type annotations, with this your editor and external tools can give you better support">type annotated</abbr> code base.
    * Used in production applications.
    
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  5. docs/en/docs/advanced/openapi-callbacks.md

    So, what we will do next is add the code to document how that *external API* should look like to receive the callback from *your API*.
    
    That documentation will show up in the Swagger UI at `/docs` in your API, and it will let external developers know how to build the *external API*.
    
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  6. docs/en/docs/fastapi-cli.md

    In most cases you would (and should) have a "termination proxy" handling HTTPS for you on top, this will depend on how you deploy your application, your provider might do this for you, or you might need to set it up yourself.
    
    !!! tip
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  7. maven-api-impl/src/test/remote-repo/org/apache/apache/1/apache-1.pom

      ~
      ~ Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
      ~ you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
      ~ You may obtain a copy of the License at
      ~
      ~      http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
      ~
      ~ Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
      ~ distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
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  8. architecture/runtimes.md

            daemon --> worker2
    
            worker3["Worker process"]
            daemon --> worker3
        
    ```
    
    These are all Java processes. Each process has a corresponding "runtime".
    All source code in Gradle is written to target one or more of these runtimes.
    Most source code targets the daemon and the remaining code either targets a single runtime, for example the Gradle client, or is shared across multiple runtimes.
    
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  9. docs/fr/docs/index.md

    ## Sponsors
    
    <!-- sponsors -->
    
    {% if sponsors %}
    {% for sponsor in sponsors.gold -%}
    <a href="{{ sponsor.url }}" target="_blank" title="{{ sponsor.title }}"><img src="{{ sponsor.img }}" style="border-radius:15px"></a>
    {% endfor -%}
    {%- for sponsor in sponsors.silver -%}
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  10. docs/auditlog/auditlog-echo.md

    1. Run the tool with:
    
    ```
    go run docs/auditlog/auditlog-echo.go
    ```
    
    The listen port has a default value (8080), but can be set with the `-port` flag.
    
    2. Configure audit logging in MinIO with for example:
    
    ```
    mc admin config set myminio audit_webhook enable=on endpoint=http://localhost:8080
    ```
    
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