Noun
cohost (plural cohosts)
- A joint host alongside another (compare costar).
Translations
joint host
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 共同主人 (gòngtóng zhǔrén), 聯合主辦方/联合主办方 (liánhé zhǔbànfāng), 搭檔主持人/搭档主持人 (dādàng zhǔchírén)
- Finnish: juontajapari
- Portuguese: please add this translation if you can
- Russian: соведу́щий (ru) m (sovedúščij), соведу́щая (ru) f (sovedúščaja)
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Verb
cohost (third-person singular simple present cohosts, present participle cohosting, simple past and past participle cohosted)
- To act as a joint host.
- (computing, transitive) To store data or applications on a shared server (as in web hosting).
2006, Hossein Bidgoli, Handbook of Information Security:Generally speaking, in a shared computing system, such as a server farm shared by multiple cohosted Web sites, common resources can be categorized into two different types: those shared in time and those shared in space.
2011, Michael Michael, Hector Linares, Mastering Virtual Machine Manager 2008 R2, →ISBN, page 52:If you choose to cohost specific components on the same server (e.g., VMM server and database), please keep in mind that each has its own performance characteristics and resource requirements.
2015, Byron Wright, Brian Svidergol, Virtualizing Desktops and Apps with Windows Server 2012 R2 Inside Out, →ISBN:For small and midsize scenarios, which commonly address an environment with a small number of users and few packages in a single geographical site, you might cohost all of the roles on a single server.
2016, Jordan Krause, Mastering Windows Server 2016, →ISBN, page 115:However, it is not a Microsoft-recommended installation path and you should build your CAs on their own servers; try not to cohost them with other roles whenever possible.
Translations
store data on a shared server