MediaWiki API result

This is the HTML representation of the JSON format. HTML is good for debugging, but is unsuitable for application use.

Specify the format parameter to change the output format. To see the non-HTML representation of the JSON format, set format=json.

See the complete documentation, or the API help for more information.

{
    "batchcomplete": "",
    "continue": {
        "gapcontinue": "Scale_Up",
        "continue": "gapcontinue||"
    },
    "warnings": {
        "main": {
            "*": "Subscribe to the mediawiki-api-announce mailing list at <https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/mediawiki-api-announce> for notice of API deprecations and breaking changes."
        },
        "revisions": {
            "*": "Because \"rvslots\" was not specified, a legacy format has been used for the output. This format is deprecated, and in the future the new format will always be used."
        }
    },
    "query": {
        "pages": {
            "841": {
                "pageid": 841,
                "ns": 0,
                "title": "S1",
                "revisions": [
                    {
                        "contentformat": "text/x-wiki",
                        "contentmodel": "wikitext",
                        "*": "S1 is [[Solid Silicon]]'s first server and workstation OpenPOWER CPU ([[Power ISA|POWER ISA]] v3.1). It uses PCIe Gen 5<ref>[https://nitter.net/RaptorCompSys/status/1715173990556414412#m Raptor tweet 2023 Oct 20]</ref>.\n\n= References =\n\n<references />\n\n[[Category:Solid Silicon (SS) Products]]"
                    }
                ]
            },
            "64": {
                "pageid": 64,
                "ns": 0,
                "title": "Scale Out",
                "revisions": [
                    {
                        "contentformat": "text/x-wiki",
                        "contentmodel": "wikitext",
                        "*": "Scale Out (SO) is IBM's term for open systems that focus on higher core counts, high I/O bandwidth, and OS-level parallelism.  These systems typically support open software such as Linux and BSD, and tend to use moderate core threading levels such as [[SMT4|SMT4]].\n\nContrast with [[Scale_Up|Scale Up (SU)]]."
                    }
                ]
            }
        }
    }
}