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MN−ITS is the DHS billing system for providers enrolled in Minnesota Health Care Programs (MHCP). You must be an MHCP-enrolled provider AND registered to use MN−ITS to access the system. Senator Dave Min represents Senate District 37, which include cities of Costa Mesa, a small portion of Anaheim, a portion of Huntington Beach, Irvine, Laguna Beach, Laguna Woods, Lake Forest, Newport Beach, a large portion of Orange, Tustin & more. Minecraft: Education Edition. Minecraft Earth. Community; Merch; Support.

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<?php
echo min(2, 3, 1, 6, 7); // 1
echo min(array(2, 4, 5)); // 2
// The string 'hello' when compared to an int is treated as 0
// Since the two values are equal, the order they are provided determines the result
echo min(0, 'hello'); // 0
echo min('hello', 0); // hello
// Here we are comparing -1 < 0, so -1 is the lowest value
echo min('hello', -1); // -1
// With multiple arrays of different lengths, min returns the shortest
$val = min(array(2, 2, 2), array(1, 1, 1, 1)); // array(2, 2, 2)
// Multiple arrays of the same length are compared from left to right
// so in our example: 2 2, but 4 < 5
$val = min(array(2, 4, 8), array(2, 5, 1)); // array(2, 4, 8)
// If both an array and non-array are given, the array is never returned
// as comparisons treat arrays as greater than any other value
$val = min('string', array(2, 5, 7), 42); // string
// If one argument is NULL or a boolean, it will be compared against
// other values using the rules FALSE < TRUE and NULL FALSE regardless of the
// other types involved
// In the below examples, both -10 and 10 are treated as TRUE in the comparison
$val = min(-10, FALSE, 10); // FALSE
$val = min(-10, NULL, 10); // NULL
// 0, on the other hand, is treated as FALSE, so is 'lower than' TRUE
$val = min(0, TRUE); // 0
?>

MinIO is a High Performance Object Storage released under Apache License v2.0. It is API compatible with Amazon S3 cloud storage service. Use MinIO to build high performance infrastructure for machine learning, analytics and application data workloads.

This README provides quickstart instructions on running MinIO on baremetal hardware, including Docker-based installations. For Kubernetes environments,
use the MinIO Kubernetes Operator.

See and click MINIO SDKS in the navigation to view MinIO SDKs for supported languages. NOTE: To deploy MinIO on Docker with persistent storage, you must map local persistent directories from the host OS to the container using the docker -v option.

Use the following commands to run a standalone MinIO server on a Docker container.

Standalone MinIO servers are best suited for early development and evaluation. Certain features such as versioning, object locking, and bucket replication
require distributed deploying MinIO with Erasure Coding. For extended development and production, deploy MinIO with Erasure Coding enabled - specifically,
with a minimum of 4 drives per MinIO server. See MinIO Erasure Code Quickstart Guide
for more complete documentation.

Stable

Run the following command to run the latest stable image of MinIO on a Docker container using an ephemeral data volume:

The MinIO deployment starts using default root credentials minioadmin:minioadmin. You can test the deployment using the MinIO Browser, an embedded
web-based object browser built into MinIO Server. Point a web browser running on the host machine to http://127.0.0.1:9000 and log in with the
root credentials. You can use the Browser to create buckets, upload objects, and browse the contents of the MinIO server.

You can also connect using any S3-compatible tool, such as the MinIO Client mc commandline tool. See
Test using MinIO Client mc for more information on using the mc commandline tool. For application developers,
see https://docs.min.io/docs/ and click MINIO SDKS in the navigation to view MinIO SDKs for supported languages.

NOTE: To deploy MinIO on Docker with persistent storage, you must map local persistent directories from the host OS to the container using the
docker -v option. For example, -v /mnt/data:/data maps the host OS drive at /mnt/data to /data on the Docker container.

Edge

Run the following command to run the bleeding-edge image of MinIO on a Docker container using an ephemeral data volume:

The MinIO deployment starts using default root credentials minioadmin:minioadmin. You can test the deployment using the MinIO Browser, an embedded
web-based object browser built into MinIO Server. Point a web browser running on the host machine to http://127.0.0.1:9000 and log in with the
root credentials. You can use the Browser to create buckets, upload objects, and browse the contents of the MinIO server.

You can also connect using any S3-compatible tool, such as the MinIO Client mc commandline tool. See
Test using MinIO Client mc for more information on using the mc commandline tool. For application developers,
see https://docs.min.io/docs/ and click MINIO SDKS in the navigation to view MinIO SDKs for supported languages.

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NOTE: To deploy MinIO on Docker with persistent storage, you must map local persistent directories from the host OS to the container using the
docker -v option. For example, -v /mnt/data:/data maps the host OS drive at /mnt/data to /data on the Docker container.

Use the following commands to run a standalone MinIO server on macOS.

Standalone MinIO servers are best suited for early development and evaluation. Certain features such as versioning, object locking, and bucket replication
require distributed deploying MinIO with Erasure Coding. For extended development and production, deploy MinIO with Erasure Coding enabled - specifically,
with a minimum of 4 drives per MinIO server. See MinIO Erasure Code Quickstart Guide
for more complete documentation.

Homebrew (recommended)

Run the following command to install the latest stable MinIO package using Homebrew. Replace /data with the path to the drive or directory in which you want MinIO to store data.

NOTE: If you previously installed minio using brew install minio then it is recommended that you reinstall minio from minio/stable/minio official repo instead.

The MinIO deployment starts using default root credentials minioadmin:minioadmin. You can test the deployment using the MinIO Browser, an embedded
web-based object browser built into MinIO Server. Point a web browser running on the host machine to http://127.0.0.1:9000 and log in with the
root credentials. You can use the Browser to create buckets, upload objects, and browse the contents of the MinIO server.

You can also connect using any S3-compatible tool, such as the MinIO Client mc commandline tool. See
Test using MinIO Client mc for more information on using the mc commandline tool. For application developers,
see https://docs.min.io/docs/ and click MINIO SDKS in the navigation to view MinIO SDKs for supported languages.

Binary Download

Use the following command to download and run a standalone MinIO server on macOS. Replace /data with the path to the drive or directory in which you want MinIO to store data.

The MinIO deployment starts using default root credentials minioadmin:minioadmin. You can test the deployment using the MinIO Browser, an embedded
web-based object browser built into MinIO Server. Point a web browser running on the host machine to http://127.0.0.1:9000 and log in with the
root credentials. You can use the Browser to create buckets, upload objects, and browse the contents of the MinIO server.

You can also connect using any S3-compatible tool, such as the MinIO Client mc commandline tool. See
Test using MinIO Client mc for more information on using the mc commandline tool. For application developers,
see https://docs.min.io/docs/ and click MINIO SDKS in the navigation to view MinIO SDKs for supported languages.

Use the following command to run a standalone MinIO server on Linux hosts running 64-bit Intel/AMD architectures. Replace /data with the path to the drive or directory in which you want MinIO to store data.

Replace /data with the path to the drive or directory in which you want MinIO to store data.

The following table lists supported architectures. Replace the wget URL with the architecture for your Linux host.

ArchitectureURL
64-bit Intel/AMDhttps://dl.min.io/server/minio/release/linux-amd64/minio
64-bit ARMhttps://dl.min.io/server/minio/release/linux-arm64/minio
64-bit PowerPC LE (ppc64le)https://dl.min.io/server/minio/release/linux-ppc64le/minio
IBM Z-Series (S390X)https://dl.min.io/server/minio/release/linux-s390x/minio

The MinIO deployment starts using default root credentials minioadmin:minioadmin. You can test the deployment using the MinIO Browser, an embedded
web-based object browser built into MinIO Server. Point a web browser running on the host machine to http://127.0.0.1:9000 and log in with the
root credentials. You can use the Browser to create buckets, upload objects, and browse the contents of the MinIO server.

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You can also connect using any S3-compatible tool, such as the MinIO Client mc commandline tool. See
Test using MinIO Client mc for more information on using the mc commandline tool. For application developers,
see https://docs.min.io/docs/ and click MINIO SDKS in the navigation to view MinIO SDKs for supported languages.

NOTE: Standalone MinIO servers are best suited for early development and evaluation. Certain features such as versioning, object locking, and bucket replication
require distributed deploying MinIO with Erasure Coding. For extended development and production, deploy MinIO with Erasure Coding enabled - specifically,
with a minimum of 4 drives per MinIO server. See MinIO Erasure Code Quickstart Guide
for more complete documentation.

To run MinIO on 64-bit Windows hosts, download the MinIO executable from the following URL:

Use the following command to run a standalone MinIO server on the Windows host. Replace D: with the path to the drive or directory in which you want MinIO to store data. You must change the terminal or powershell directory to the location of the minio.exe executable, or add the path to that directory to the system $PATH:

The MinIO deployment starts using default root credentials minioadmin:minioadmin. You can test the deployment using the MinIO Browser, an embedded
web-based object browser built into MinIO Server. Point a web browser running on the host machine to http://127.0.0.1:9000 and log in with the
root credentials. You can use the Browser to create buckets, upload objects, and browse the contents of the MinIO server.

You can also connect using any S3-compatible tool, such as the MinIO Client mc commandline tool. See
Test using MinIO Client mc for more information on using the mc commandline tool. For application developers,
see https://docs.min.io/docs/ and click MINIO SDKS in the navigation to view MinIO SDKs for supported languages.

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NOTE: Standalone MinIO servers are best suited for early development and evaluation. Certain features such as versioning, object locking, and bucket replication
require distributed deploying MinIO with Erasure Coding. For extended development and production, deploy MinIO with Erasure Coding enabled - specifically,
with a minimum of 4 drives per MinIO server. See MinIO Erasure Code Quickstart Guide
for more complete documentation.

MinIO does not provide an official FreeBSD binary. However, FreeBSD maintains an upstream release using pkg:

Use the following commands to compile and run a standalone MinIO server from source. Source installation is only intended for developers and advanced users. If you do not have a working Golang environment, please follow How to install Golang. Minimum version required is go1.16

The MinIO deployment starts using default root credentials minioadmin:minioadmin. You can test the deployment using the MinIO Browser, an embedded
web-based object browser built into MinIO Server. Point a web browser running on the host machine to http://127.0.0.1:9000 and log in with the
root credentials. You can use the Browser to create buckets, upload objects, and browse the contents of the MinIO server.

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You can also connect using any S3-compatible tool, such as the MinIO Client mc commandline tool. See
Test using MinIO Client mc for more information on using the mc commandline tool. For application developers,
see https://docs.min.io/docs/ and click MINIO SDKS in the navigation to view MinIO SDKs for supported languages.

NOTE: Standalone MinIO servers are best suited for early development and evaluation. Certain features such as versioning, object locking, and bucket replication
require distributed deploying MinIO with Erasure Coding. For extended development and production, deploy MinIO with Erasure Coding enabled - specifically,
with a minimum of 4 drives per MinIO server. See MinIO Erasure Code Quickstart Guide
for more complete documentation.

MinIO strongly recommends against using compiled-from-source MinIO servers for production environments.

Allow port access for Firewalls

By default MinIO uses the port 9000 to listen for incoming connections. If your platform blocks the port by default, you may need to enable access to the port.

ufw

For hosts with ufw enabled (Debian based distros), you can use ufw command to allow traffic to specific ports. Use below command to allow access to port 9000

Below command enables all incoming traffic to ports ranging from 9000 to 9010.

firewall-cmd

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For hosts with firewall-cmd enabled (CentOS), you can use firewall-cmd command to allow traffic to specific ports. Use below commands to allow access to port 9000

This command gets the active zone(s). Now, apply port rules to the relevant zones returned above. For example if the zone is public, use

Note that permanent makes sure the rules are persistent across firewall start, restart or reload. Finally reload the firewall for changes to take effect.

iptables

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For hosts with iptables enabled (RHEL, CentOS, etc), you can use iptables command to enable all traffic coming to specific ports. Use below command to allow
access to port 9000

Below command enables all incoming traffic to ports ranging from 9000 to 9010.

Pre-existing data

When deployed on a single drive, MinIO server lets clients access any pre-existing data in the data directory. For example, if MinIO is started with the command minio server /mnt/data, any pre-existing data in the /mnt/data directory would be accessible to the clients.

The above statement is also valid for all gateway backends.

Test using MinIO Browser

MinIO Server comes with an embedded web based object browser. Point your web browser to http://127.0.0.1:9000 to ensure your server has started successfully.

Test using MinIO Client mc

mc provides a modern alternative to UNIX commands like ls, cat, cp, mirror, diff etc. It supports filesystems and Amazon S3 compatible cloud storage services. Follow the MinIO Client Quickstart Guide for further instructions.

MinIO server supports rolling upgrades, i.e. you can update one MinIO instance at a time in a distributed cluster. This allows upgrades with no downtime. Upgrades can be done manually by replacing the binary with the latest release and restarting all servers in a rolling fashion. However, we recommend all our users to use mc admin update from the client. This will update all the nodes in the cluster simultaneously and restart them, as shown in the following command from the MinIO client (mc):

NOTE: some releases might not allow rolling upgrades, this is always called out in the release notes and it is generally advised to read release notes before upgrading. In such a situation mc admin update is the recommended upgrading mechanism to upgrade all servers at once.

Important things to remember during MinIO upgrades

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  • mc admin update will only work if the user running MinIO has write access to the parent directory where the binary is located, for example if the current binary is at /usr/local/bin/minio, you would need write access to /usr/local/bin.
  • mc admin update updates and restarts all servers simultaneously, applications would retry and continue their respective operations upon upgrade.
  • mc admin update is disabled in kubernetes/container environments, container environments provide their own mechanisms to rollout of updates.
  • In the case of federated setups mc admin update should be run against each cluster individually. Avoid updating mc to any new releases until all clusters have been successfully updated.
  • If using kes as KMS with MinIO, just replace the binary and restart kes more information about kes can be found here
  • If using Vault as KMS with MinIO, ensure you have followed the Vault upgrade procedure outlined here: https://www.vaultproject.io/docs/upgrading/index.html
  • If using etcd with MinIO for the federation, ensure you have followed the etcd upgrade procedure outlined here: https://github.com/etcd-io/etcd/blob/master/Documentation/upgrades/upgrading-etcd.md

Please follow MinIO Contributor's Guide

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Use of MinIO is governed by the Apache 2.0 License found at LICENSE.





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