Showing 4 open source projects for "network documentation"

View related business solutions
  • Our Free Plans just got better! | Auth0 Icon
    Our Free Plans just got better! | Auth0

    With up to 25k MAUs and unlimited Okta connections, our Free Plan lets you focus on what you do best—building great apps.

    You asked, we delivered! Auth0 is excited to expand our Free and Paid plans to include more options so you can focus on building, deploying, and scaling applications without having to worry about your security. Auth0 now, thank yourself later.
    Try free now
  • Ship Agents Faster Icon
    Ship Agents Faster

    Transform your applications and workflows into powerful agentic systems at global scale.

    Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform lets you rapidly build, scale, govern and optimize production-ready agents grounded in your organization's data. The platform enables developers to build custom or pre-built agents for virtually any use case. New customers get $300 in free credits.
    Get Started Free
  • 1
    Katalog

    Katalog

    Catalog your devices to search, analyze, and backup your files.

    Catalog your devices to search, analyze, and backup your files: - Create catalogs from different sources or devices - Search and explore files even when the devices are disconnected - Organize and backup your collection of files, and get statistics User documentation: - Get started/Tutorial: https://stephanecouturier.github.io/Katalog/docs/tutorial - Download (Linux Flathub): https://flathub.org/en/apps/io.github.stephanecouturier.Katalog - Documentation:...
    Leader badge
    Downloads: 80 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 2
    MooseFS

    MooseFS

    Fault tolerant, POSIX-compliant, Net Distributed Storage / File System

    MooseFS (MFS) is a fault tolerant, highly performing, scaling-out, network distributed file system. It spreads data over several physical servers which are visible to the user as one resource. For standard file operations MooseFS mounted with FUSE acts as other Unix-alike file systems: * A hierarchical structure (directory tree) * Stores POSIX file attributes (permissions, last access and modification times) Supports special files (block and character devices, pipes and sockets) * Symbolic links (file names pointing to target files, not necessarily on MooseFS) and hard links (different names of files which refer to the same data on MooseFS) * Access to the file system can be limited based on IP address and/or password MooseFS on GitHub: https://github.com/moosefs/moosefs Packages repository, download: https://moosefs.com/download Documentation: https://moosefs.com/support Recent changes: https://github.com/moosefs/moosefs/blob/master/NEWS
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 3
    Redo Rescue: Backup and Recovery

    Redo Rescue: Backup and Recovery

    Backup and Recovery Made Easy

    Redo Rescue Backup and Recovery can backup and restore an entire system in minutes with a point-and-click interface anyone can use. Bare metal restore to a new, blank drive and be up and running in minutes. Supports saving to and restoring from local disks or shared network drives. Selectively restore partitions and remap them to different locations on the target drive. Additional tools included for partition editing, web browsing, and more. Runs from live CD/USB; no installation needed. ...
    Leader badge
    Downloads: 494 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 4
    Zonomania
    Zonomania is a webbased application to document a SAN (Storage Area Network) environment. It is powerful in the hand of a SAN Administrator to manage, engineer and plan a SAN.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • Custom VMs From 1 to 96 vCPUs With 99.95% Uptime Icon
    Custom VMs From 1 to 96 vCPUs With 99.95% Uptime

    General-purpose, compute-optimized, or GPU/TPU-accelerated. Built to your exact specs.

    Live migration and automatic failover keep workloads online through maintenance. One free e2-micro VM every month.
    Try Free
  • Previous
  • You're on page 1
  • Next