repair capability - meaning and definition. What is repair capability
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What (who) is repair capability - definition

COMPUTER SECURITY MODEL
Object-capability; Object capability; Object capability model; Object-capability language

Full operating capability         
MILITARY LOGISTICS TERM
Full operational capability; Full Operational Capability; Draft:Full operating capability
In military acquisition, full operating capability or full operational capability (FOC) is the completion of a development effort. This is usually preceded by an initial operating capability or initial operational capability (IOC) phase.
DNA repair         
  • DNA ligase, shown above repairing chromosomal damage, is an enzyme that joins broken nucleotides together by catalyzing the formation of an internucleotide [[ester]] bond between the phosphate backbone and the deoxyribose nucleotides.
  • A chart of common DNA damaging agents, examples of lesions they cause in DNA, and pathways used to repair these lesions. Also shown are many of the genes in these pathways, an indication of which genes are epigenetically regulated to have reduced (or increased) expression in various cancers. It also shows genes in the error-prone microhomology-mediated end joining pathway with increased expression in various cancers.
  • Most life span influencing genes affect the rate of DNA damage.
  • DNA repair rate is an important determinant of cell pathology.
  • The main double-strand break repair pathways
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  • Paul Modrich talks about himself and his work in DNA repair.
  • Structure of the base-excision repair enzyme [[uracil-DNA glycosylase]] excising a hydrolytically-produced uracil residue from DNA. The uracil residue is shown in yellow.
PROCESS OF RESTORING DNA AFTER DAMAGE
Dna repair; DNA Repair; DNA damage; DNA repair genes; Excision repair; Excision repair mechanism; Dna repair enzymes; Dna repair-deficiency disorders; Dna repair genes; Double-strand breaks; Double-strand break; Types of DNA lesions; Double strand breaks; Translesion synthesis; DNA damage checkpoint; Double strand break; Self-repair mechanisms; DNA repair gene; Single strand break; Single-strand break; DNA damage checkpoints; DNA lesions; DNA lesion; Translesion; Translation polymerase; DNA-damage response; DNA repair-deficiency disorders; Translesion DNA synthesis; Double-stranded break; Single-stranded break; DNA damage repair
DNA repair is a collection of processes by which a cell identifies and corrects damage to the DNA molecules that encode its genome. In human cells, both normal metabolic activities and environmental factors such as radiation can cause DNA damage, resulting in tens of thousands of individual molecular lesions per cell per day.
incapable         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Capability (computers); Capability (computer science); Capabilities; Capable; Capability architecture; Capability system; Uncapable; Incapable; Capability (disambiguation); Incapable (song); Incapable (disambiguation)
¦ adjective
1. (incapable of) unable to do.
not allowing the possibility of (an action).
2. unable to behave rationally or manage one's affairs.
Derivatives
incapability noun
incapably adverb

Wikipedia

Object-capability model

The object-capability model is a computer security model. A capability describes a transferable right to perform one (or more) operations on a given object. It can be obtained by the following combination:

  • An unforgeable reference (in the sense of object references or protected pointers) that can be sent in messages.
  • A message that specifies the operation to be performed.

The security model relies on not being able to forge references.

  • Objects can interact only by sending messages on references.
  • A reference can be obtained by:
  1. Initial conditions: In the initial state of the computational world being described, object A may already have a reference to object B.
  2. Parenthood: If A creates B, at that moment A obtains the only reference to the newly created B.
  3. Endowment: If A creates B, B is born with that subset of A's references with which A chose to endow it.
  4. Introduction: If A has references to both B and C, A can send to B a message containing a reference to C. B can retain that reference for subsequent use.

In the object-capability model, all computation is performed following the above rules.

Advantages that motivate object-oriented programming, such as encapsulation or information hiding, modularity, and separation of concerns, correspond to security goals such as least privilege and privilege separation in capability-based programming.

The object-capability model was first proposed by Jack Dennis and Earl C. Van Horn in 1966.

Examples of use of repair capability
1. "Having a repair capability is not a constraint to flight by NASA‘s plan.
2. "I told him ... basically we had no repair, or a minimum of repair capability that really hadn‘t been verified to a major degree, said Stafford.