- Sort Score
- Num 10 results
- Language All
Results 101 - 110 of 1,058 for bundling (0.05 seconds)
-
helm-releases/minio-5.0.11.tgz
third party CAs MinIO can connect to other servers, including MinIO nodes or other server types such as NATs and Redis. If these servers use certificates that were not registered with a known CA, add trust for these certificates to MinIO Server by bundling these certificates into a Kubernetes secret and providing it to Helm via the `trustedCertsSecret` value. If `.Values.tls.enabled` is `true` and you're installing certificates for third party CAs, remember to include MinIO's own certificate with key...
Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Wed Jun 21 19:29:09 GMT 2023 - 20.3K bytes - Click Count (0) -
helm-releases/minio-5.0.12.tgz
third party CAs MinIO can connect to other servers, including MinIO nodes or other server types such as NATs and Redis. If these servers use certificates that were not registered with a known CA, add trust for these certificates to MinIO Server by bundling these certificates into a Kubernetes secret and providing it to Helm via the `trustedCertsSecret` value. If `.Values.tls.enabled` is `true` and you're installing certificates for third party CAs, remember to include MinIO's own certificate with key...
Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Fri Jul 07 16:44:16 GMT 2023 - 20.4K bytes - Click Count (0) -
helm-releases/minio-5.0.13.tgz
third party CAs MinIO can connect to other servers, including MinIO nodes or other server types such as NATs and Redis. If these servers use certificates that were not registered with a known CA, add trust for these certificates to MinIO Server by bundling these certificates into a Kubernetes secret and providing it to Helm via the `trustedCertsSecret` value. If `.Values.tls.enabled` is `true` and you're installing certificates for third party CAs, remember to include MinIO's own certificate with key...
Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Sun Jul 09 07:13:05 GMT 2023 - 20.3K bytes - Click Count (0) -
helm-releases/minio-5.0.7.tgz
third party CAs MinIO can connect to other servers, including MinIO nodes or other server types such as NATs and Redis. If these servers use certificates that were not registered with a known CA, add trust for these certificates to MinIO Server by bundling these certificates into a Kubernetes secret and providing it to Helm via the `trustedCertsSecret` value. If `.Values.tls.enabled` is `true` and you're installing certificates for third party CAs, remember to include MinIO's own certificate with key...
Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Mon Feb 13 10:37:23 GMT 2023 - 20.3K bytes - Click Count (0) -
helm-releases/minio-4.0.9.tgz
third party CAs MinIO can connect to other servers, including MinIO nodes or other server types such as NATs and Redis. If these servers use certificates that were not registered with a known CA, add trust for these certificates to MinIO Server by bundling these certificates into a Kubernetes secret and providing it to Helm via the `trustedCertsSecret` value. If `.Values.tls.enabled` is `true` and you're installing certificates for third party CAs, remember to include MinIO's own certificate with key...
Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Wed Aug 03 06:10:44 GMT 2022 - 18.6K bytes - Click Count (0) -
helm-releases/minio-5.3.0.tgz
third party CAs MinIO can connect to other servers, including MinIO nodes or other server types such as NATs and Redis. If these servers use certificates that were not registered with a known CA, add trust for these certificates to MinIO Server by bundling these certificates into a Kubernetes secret and providing it to Helm via the `trustedCertsSecret` value. If `.Values.tls.enabled` is `true` and you're installing certificates for third party CAs, remember to include MinIO's own certificate with key...
Created: Sun Apr 05 19:28:12 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Fri Oct 11 12:21:05 GMT 2024 - 21.7K bytes - Click Count (0) -
BUILDING.md
Building Elasticsearch with Gradle ============================= Elasticsearch is built using the [Gradle](https://gradle.org/) open source build tools. This document provides a general guidelines for using and working on the elasticsearch build logic. ## Build logic organisation
Created: Wed Apr 08 16:19:15 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Thu Sep 23 07:45:59 GMT 2021 - 6.7K bytes - Click Count (0) -
.github/FUNDING.yml
# These are supported funding model platforms github: [jinzhu] patreon: jinzhu
Created: Sun Apr 05 09:35:12 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Sun Jun 07 04:47:26 GMT 2020 - 102 bytes - Click Count (1) -
docs/en/docs/tutorial/handling-errors.md
# Handling Errors { #handling-errors } There are many situations in which you need to notify an error to a client that is using your API. This client could be a browser with a frontend, a code from someone else, an IoT device, etc. You could need to tell the client that: * The client doesn't have enough privileges for that operation. * The client doesn't have access to that resource. * The item the client was trying to access doesn't exist. * etc.Created: Sun Apr 05 07:19:11 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Thu Mar 05 18:13:19 GMT 2026 - 8.9K bytes - Click Count (0) -
.github/FUNDING.yml
Sebastián RamÃrez <******@****.***> 1589724233 +0200
Created: Sun Apr 05 07:19:11 GMT 2026 - Last Modified: Sun May 17 14:03:53 GMT 2020 - 19 bytes - Click Count (0)