freeze-thaw durability - meaning and definition. What is freeze-thaw durability
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What (who) is freeze-thaw durability - definition

PROPERTY OF A DATABASE SYSTEM GUARANTEEING THAT TRANSACTIONS THAT HAVE COMMITTED WILL SURVIVE PERMANENTLY IN THE EVENT OF CRASHES
Durability (data management); Durability (computer science); Durability (DBMS)

Freeze (software engineering)         
IN SOFTWARE ENGINEERING, DEVELOPMENT PHASE DURING WHICH POLICY RESTRICTS MAKING CHANGES TO THE SYSTEM
Feature freeze; Code freeze; Codeslush
In software engineering, a freeze is a point in time in the development process after which the rules for making changes to the source code or related resources become more strict, or the period during which those rules are applied. A freeze helps move the project forward towards a release or the end of an iteration by reducing the scale or frequency of changes, and may be used to help meet a roadmap.
Eugene V. Thaw         
AMERICAN ART COLLECTOR AND PHILANTHROPIST
Eugene Thaw
Eugene Victor Thaw (October 27, 1927 – January 3, 2018) was an American art dealer and collector. He was the owner of an art gallery on Madison Avenue in Manhattan, and a past president of the Art Dealers Association of America.
Freeze thaw resistance         
THE PROPERTY OF SOLIDS TO RESIST CYCLIC FREEZING AND MELTING
Freeze/thaw resistance; Freezeing and thawing resistance
Freeze thaw resistance, or freezing and thawing resistance, is the property of solids to resist cyclic freezing and melting.

Wikipedia

Durability (database systems)

In database systems, durability is the ACID property which guarantees that transactions that have committed will survive permanently. For example, if a flight booking reports that a seat has successfully been booked, then the seat will remain booked even if the system crashes.

Durability can be achieved by flushing the transaction's log records to non-volatile storage before acknowledging commitment.

In distributed transactions, all participating servers must coordinate before commit can be acknowledged. This is usually done by a two-phase commit protocol.

Many DBMSs implement durability by writing transactions into a transaction log that can be reprocessed to recreate the system state right before any later failure. A transaction is deemed committed only after it is entered in the log.