分享
 
 
 

RFC1208 - Glossary of networking terms

王朝other·作者佚名  2008-05-31
窄屏简体版  字體: |||超大  

Network Working Group O. Jacobsen

Request for Comments: 1208 D. Lynch

Interop, Inc.

March 1991

A Glossary of Networking Terms

Status of this Memo

This RFCis a glossary adapted from "The INTEROP Pocket Glossary of

Networking Terms" distributed at Interop '90. This memo provides

information for the Internet community. It does not specify an

Internet standard. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

IntrodUCtion

This glossary is adapted from "The INTEROP Pocket Glossary of

Networking Terms" produced to help you understand the many terms--and

in particular the myriad of acronyms--that can be encountered at the

INTEROP Tutorials, Conference, and Exhibition.

To keep this document reasonably small we have deliberately omitted

common computer and communications terms such as disk, modem, byte,

and VLSI. In addition, the definitions have been kept brief. We

recommend that you consult the glossaries found in the major computer

networking textbooks for more comprehensive definitions.

We also realize that producing this glossary is akin to shooting at a

moving target. The computer and communications industries are moving

very rapidly, and terms and acronyms are born every day. You are

invited to submit Words which you think should be included in future

editions.

Glossary

abstract syntax: A description of a data structure that is

independent of machine-oriented structures and encodings.

ACSE: Association Control Service Element. The method used in OSI

for establishing a call between two applications. Checks the

identities and contexts of the application entities, and could apply

an authentication security check.

address mask: A bit mask used to select bits from an Internet address

for subnet addressing. The mask is 32 bits long and selects the

network portion of the Internet address and one or more bits of the

local portion. Sometimes called subnet mask.

address resolution: A means for mapping Network Layer addresses onto

media-specific addresses. See ARP.

ADMD: Administration Management Domain. An X.400 Message Handling

System public service carrier. Examples: MCImail and ATTmail in the

U.S., British Telecom Gold400mail in the U.K. The ADMDs in all

countries worldwide together provide the X.400 backbone. See PRMD.

agent: In the client-server model, the part of the system that

performs information preparation and exchange on behalf of a client

or server application. See NMS, DUA, MTA.

ANSI: American National Standards Institute. The U.S.

standardization body. ANSI is a member of the International

Organization for Standardization (ISO)

AOW: Asia and Oceania Workshop. One of the three regional OSI

Implementors Workshops, equivalent to OIW and EWOS.

API: Application Program Interface. A set of calling conventions

defining how a service is invoked through a software package.

Application Layer: The top-most layer in the OSI Reference Model

providing such communication services as electronic mail and file

transfer.

ARP: Address Resolution Protocol. The Internet protocol used to

dynamically map Internet addresses to physical (hardware) addresses

on local area networks. Limited to networks that support hardware

broadcast.

ARPA: Advanced Research Projects Agency. Now called DARPA, the U.S.

government agency that funded the ARPANET.

ARPANET: A packet switched network developed in the early 1970s. The

"grandfather" of today's Internet. ARPANET was decommissioned in

June 1990.

ASN.1: Abstract Syntax Notation One. The OSI language for describing

abstract syntax. See BER.

attribute: The form of information items provided by the X.500

Directory Service. The directory information base consists of

entries, each containing one or more attributes. Each attribute

consists of a type identifier together with one or more values. Each

directory Read operation can retrieve some or all attributes from a

designated entry.

Autonomous System: Internet (TCP/IP) terminology for a collection of

gateways (routers) that fall under one administrative entity and

cooperate using a common Interior Gateway Protocol (IGP). See

subnetwork.

backbone: The primary connectivity mechanism of a hierarchical

distributed system. All systems which have connectivity to an

intermediate system on the backbone are assured of connectivity to

each other. This does not prevent systems from setting up private

arrangements with each other to bypass the backbone for reasons of

cost, performance, or security.

Bart Simpson (R): Internet and OSI cult hero.

baseband: Characteristic of any network technology that uses a single

carrier frequency and requires all stations attached to the network

to participate in every transmission. See broadband.

BER: Basic Encoding Rules. Standard rules for encoding data units

described in ASN.1. Sometimes incorrectly lumped under the term

ASN.1, which properly refers only to the abstract syntax description

language, not the encoding technique.

big-endian: A format for storage or transmission of binary data in

which the most significant bit (or byte) comes first. The reverse

convention is called little-endian.

BITNET: Because It's Time NETwork. An academic computer network

based originally on IBM mainframe systems interconnected via leased

9600 bps lines. BITNET has recently merged with CSNET, The

Computer+Science Network (another academic computer network) to form

CREN: The Corporation for Research and Educational Networking. See

CSNET.

BOC: Bell Operating Company. More commonly referred to as RBOC for

Regional Bell Operating Company. The local telephone company in each

of the seven U.S. regions.

bridge: A device that connects two or more physical networks and

forwards packets between them. Bridges can usually be made to filter

packets, that is, to forward only certain traffic. Related devices

are: repeaters which simply forward electrical signals from one cable

to another, and full-fledged routers which make routing decisions

based on several criteria. In OSI terminology, a bridge is a Data

Link Layer intermediate system. See repeater and router.

broadband: Characteristic of any network that multiplexes multiple,

independent network carriers onto a single cable. This is usually

done using frequency division multiplexing. Broadband technology

allows several networks to coexist on one single cable; traffic from

one network does not interfere with traffic from another since the

"conversations" happen on different frequencies in the "ether,"

rather like the commercial radio system.

broadcast: A packet delivery system where a copy of a given packet is

given to all hosts attached to the network. Example: Ethernet.

BSD: Berkeley Software Distribution. Term used when describing

different versions of the Berkeley UNIX software, as in "4.3BSD

UNIX."

catenet: A network in which hosts are connected to networks with

varying characteristics, and the networks are interconnected by

gateways (routers). The Internet is an example of a catenet. See

IONL.

CCITT: International Consultative Committee for Telegraphy and

Telephony. A unit of the International Telecommunications Union

(ITU) of the United Nations. An organization with representatives

from the PTTs of the world. CCITT produces technical standards,

known as "Recommendations," for all internationally controlled

ASPects of analog and digital communications. See X Recommendations.

CCR: Commitment, Concurrency, and Recovery. An OSI application

service element used to create atomic operations across distributed

systems. Used primarily to implement two-phase commit for

transactions and nonstop operations.

client-server model: A common way to describenetwork services and the

model user processes (programs) of those services. Examples include

the name-server/name-resolver paradigm of the DNS and file-

server/file-client relationships such as NFS and diskless hosts.

CLNP: Connectionless Network Protocol. The OSI protocol for

providing the OSI Connectionless Network Service (datagram service).

CLNP is the OSI equivalent to Internet IP, and is sometimes called

ISO IP.

CLTP: Connectionless Transport Protocol. Provides for end-to-end

Transport data addressing (via Transport selector) and error control

(via checksum), but cannot guarantee delivery or provide flow

control. The OSI equivalent of UDP.

CMIP: Common Management Information Protocol. The OSI network

management protocol.

CMOT: CMIP Over TCP. An effort to use the OSI network management

protocol to manage TCP/IP networks.

connectionless: The model of interconnection in which communication

takes place without first establishing a connection. Sometimes

(imprecisely) called datagram. Examples: LANs, Internet IP and OSI

CLNP, UDP, ordinary postcards.

connection-oriented: The model of interconnection in which

communication proceeds through three well-defined phases: connection

establishment, data transfer, connection release. Examples: X.25,

Internet TCP and OSI TP4, ordinary telephone calls.

core gateway: Historically, one of a set of gateways (routers)

operated by the Internet Network Operations Center at BBN. The core

gateway system forms a central part of Internet routing in that all

groups must advertise paths to their networks from a core gateway,

using the Exterior Gateway Protocol (EGP). See EGP, backbone.

COS: Corporation for Open Systems. A vendor and user group for

conformance testing, certification, and promotion of OSI products.

COSINE: Cooperation for Open Systems Interconnection Networking in

Europe. A program sponsored by the European Commission, aimed at

using OSI to tie together European research networks.

CREN: See BITNET and CSNET.

CSMA/CD: Carrier Sense Multiple Access with Collision Detection. The

access method used by local area networking technologies such as

Ethernet.

CSNET: Computer+Science Network. A large computer network, mostly in

the U.S. but with international connections. CSNET sites include

universities, research labs, and some commercial companies. Now

merged with BITNET to form CREN. See BITNET.

DARPA: Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. The U.S.

government agency that funded the ARPANET.

Data Link Layer: The OSI layer that is responsible for data transfer

across a single physical connection, or series of bridged

connections, between two Network entities.

DCA: Defense Communications Agency. The government agency

responsible for the Defense Data Network (DDN).

DCE: Distributed Computing Environment. An architecture of standard

programming interfaces, conventions, and server functionalities

(e.g., naming, distributed file system, remote procedure call) for

distributing applications transparently across networks of

heterogeneous computers. Promoted and controlled by the Open

Software Foundation (OSF), a consortium led by HP, DEC, and IBM. See

ONC.

DDN: Defense Data Network. Comprises the MILNET and several other

DoD networks.

DECnet: Digital Equipment Corporation's proprietary network

architecture.

DNS: Domain Name System. The distributed name/address mechanism used

in the Internet.

domain: In the Internet, a part of a naming hierarchy.

Syntactically, an Internet domain name consists of a sequence of

names (labels) separated by periods (dots), e.g., "tundra.mpk.ca.us."

In OSI, "domain" is generally used as an administrative partition of

a complex distributed system, as in MHS Private Management Domain

(PRMD), and Directory Management Domain (DMD).

dotted decimal notation: The syntactic representation for a 32-bit

integer that consists of four 8-bit numbers written in base 10 with

periods (dots) separating them. Used to represent IP addresses in

the Internet as in: 192.67.67.20.

DSA: Directory System Agent. The software that provides the X.500

Directory Service for a portion of the directory information base.

Generally, each DSA is responsible for the directory information for

a single organization or organizational unit.

DUA: Directory User Agent. The software that accesses the X.500

Directory Service on behalf of the directory user. The directory

user may be a person or another software element.

EARN: European Academic Research Network. A network using BITNET

technology connecting universities and research labs in Europe.

EGP: Exterior Gateway Protocol. A reachability routing protocol used

by gateways in a two-level internet. EGP is used in the Internet

core system. See core gateway.

encapsulation: The technique used by layered protocols in which a

layer adds header information to the protocol data unit (PDU) from

the layer above. As an example, in Internet terminology, a packet

would contain a header from the physical layer, followed by a header

from the network layer (IP), followed by a header from the transport

layer (TCP), followed by the application protocol data.

end system: An OSI system which contains application processes

capable of communicating through all seven layers of OSI protocols.

Equivalent to Internet host.

entity: OSI terminology for a layer protocol machine. An entity

within a layer performs the functions of the layer within a single

computer system, accessing the layer entity below and providing

services to the layer entity above at local service access points.

ES-IS: End system to Intermediate system protocol. The OSI protocol

by which end systems announce themselves to intermediate systems.

EUnet: European UNIX Network.

EUUG: European UNIX Users Group.

EWOS: European Workshop for Open Systems. The OSI Implementors

Workshop for Europe. See OIW.

FARNET: Federation of American Research NETworks.

FDDI: Fiber Distributed Data Interface. An emerging high-speed

networking standard. The underlying medium is fiber optics, and the

topology is a dual-attached, counter-rotating Token Ring. FDDI

networks can often be spotted by the orange fiber "cable."

FIPS: Federal Information Processing Standard.

flame: To eXPress strong opinion and/or criticism of something,

usually as a frank inflammatory statement in an electronic message.

FNC: Federal Networking Council. The body responsible for

coordinating networking needs among U.S. Federal agencies.

fragmentation: The process in which an IP datagram is broken into

smaller pieces to fit the requirements of a given physical network.

The reverse process is termed reassembly. See MTU.

FRICC: Federal Research Internet Coordinating Committee. Now

replaced by the FNC.

FTAM: File Transfer, Access, and Management. The OSI remote file

service and protocol.

FTP: File Transfer Protocol. The Internet protocol (and program)

used to transfer files between hosts. See FTAM.

gateway: The original Internet term for what is now called router or

more precisely, IP router. In modern usage, the terms "gateway" and

"application gateway" refer to systems which do translation from some

native format to another. Examples include X.400 to/from RFC822

electronic mail gateways. See router.

GOSIP: Government OSI Profile. A U.S. Government procurement

specification for OSI protocols.

IAB: Internet Activities Board. The technical body that oversees the

development of the Internet suite of protocols (commonly referred to

as "TCP/IP"). It has two task forces (the IRTF and the IETF) each

charged with investigating a particular area.

ICMP: Internet Control Message Protocol. The protocol used to handle

errors and control messages at the IP layer. ICMP is actually part

of the IP protocol.

IESG: Internet Engineering Steering Group. The executive committee

of the IETF.

IETF: Internet Engineering Task Force. One of the task forces of the

IAB. The IETF is responsible for solving short-term engineering

needs of the Internet. It has over 40 Working Groups.

IGP: Interior Gateway Protocol. The protocol used to exchange

routing information between collaborating routers in the Internet.

RIP and OSPF are examples of IGPs.

IGRP: Internet Gateway Routing Protocol. A proprietary IGP used by

cisco System's routers.

INTAP: Interoperability Technology Association for Information

Processing. The technical organization which has the official

charter to develop Japanese OSI profiles and conformance tests.

intermediate system: An OSI system which is not an end system, but

which serves instead to relay communications between end systems.

See repeater, bridge, and router.

internet: A collection of networks interconnected by a set of routers

which allow them to function as a single, large virtual network.

Internet: (note the capital "I") The largest internet in the world

consisting of large national backbone nets (such as MILNET, NSFNET,

and CREN) and a myriad of regional and local campus networks all over

the world. The Internet uses the Internet protocol suite. To be on

the Internet you must have IP connectivity, i.e., be able to Telnet

to--or ping--other systems. Networks with only e-mail connectivity

are not actually classified as being on the Internet.

Internet address: A 32-bit address assigned to hosts using TCP/IP.

See dotted decimal notation.

IONL: Internal Organization of the Network Layer. The OSI standard

for the detailed architecture of the Network Layer. Basically, it

partitions the Network layer into subnetworks interconnected by

convergence protocols (equivalent to internetworking protocols),

creating what Internet calls a catenet or internet.

IP: Internet Protocol. The network layer protocol for the Internet

protocol suite.

IP datagram: The fundamental unit of information passed across the

Internet. Contains source and destination addresses along with data

and a number of fields which define such things as the length of the

datagram, the header checksum, and flags to say whether the datagram

can be (or has been) fragmented.

IRTF: Internet Research Task Force. One of the task forces of the

IAB. The group responsible for research and development of the

Internet protocol suite.

ISDN: Integrated Services Digital Network. An emerging technology

which is beginning to be offered by the telephone carriers of the

world. ISDN combines voice and digital network services in a single

medium making it possible to offer customers digital data services as

well as voice connections through a single "wire." The standards

that define ISDN are specified by CCITT.

IS-IS: Intermediate system to Intermediate system protocol. The OSI

protocol by which intermediate systems exchange routing information.

ISO: International Organization for Standardization. You knew that,

right? Best known for the 7-layer OSI Reference Model. See OSI.

ISODE: ISO Development Environment. A popular implementation of the

upper layers of OSI. Pronounced eye-so-dee-eee.

JANET: Joint Academic Network. A university network in the U.K.

JUNET: Japan UNIX Network.

KA9Q: A popular implementation of TCP/IP and associated protocols for

amateur packet radio systems.

Kermit: A popular file transfer and terminal emulation program.

little-endian: A format for storage or transmission of binary data in

which the least significant byte (bit) comes first. See big-endian.

mail exploder: Part of an electronic mail delivery system which

allows a message to be delivered to a list of addressees. Mail

exploders are used to implement mailing lists. Users send messages

to a single address (e.g., hacks@somehost.edu) and the mail exploder

takes care of delivery to the individual mailboxes in the list.

mail gateway: A machine that connects two or more electronic mail

systems (especially dissimilar mail systems on two different

networks) and transfers messages between them. Sometimes the mapping

and translation can be quite complex, and generally it requires a

store-and-forward scheme whereby the message is received from one

system completely before it is transmitted to the next system after

suitable translations.

Martian: Humorous term applied to packets that turn up unexpectedly

on the wrong network because of bogus routing entries. Also used as

a name for a packet which has an altogether bogus (non-registered or

ill-formed) Internet address.

MHS: Message Handling System. The system of message user agents,

message transfer agents, message stores, and access units which

together provide OSI electronic mail. MHS is specified in the CCITT

X.400 series of Recommendations.

MIB: Management Information Base. A collection of objects that can

be accessed via a network management protocol. See SMI.

MILNET: MILitary NETwork. Originally part of the ARPANET, MILNET was

partitioned in 1984 to make it possible for military installations to

have reliable network service, while the ARPANET continued to be used

for research. See DDN.

MTA: Message Transfer Agent. An OSI application process used to

store and forward messages in the X.400 Message Handling System.

Equivalent to Internet mail agent.

MTU: Maximum Transmission Unit. The largest possible unit of data

that can be sent on a given physical medium. Example: The MTU of

Ethernet is 1500 bytes. See fragmentation.

multicast: A special form of broadcast where copies of the packet are

delivered to only a subset of all possible destinations. See

broadcast.

multi-homed host: A computer connected to more than one physical data

link. The data links may or may not be attached to the same network.

name resolution: The process of mapping a name into the corresponding

address. See DNS.

NetBIOS: Network Basic Input Output System. The standard interface

to networks on IBM PC and compatible systems.

Network Address: See Internet address or OSI Network Address.

Network Layer: The OSI layer that is responsible for routing,

switching, and subnetwork access across the entire OSI environment.

NFS(R): Network File System. A distributed file system developed by

Sun Microsystems which allows a set of computers to cooperatively

access each other's files in a transparent manner.

NIC: Network Information Center. Originally there was only one,

located at SRI International and tasked to serve the ARPANET (and

later DDN) community. Today, there are many NICs, operated by local,

regional, and national networks all over the world. Such centers

provide user assistance, document service, training, and much more.

NIST: National Institute of Standards and Technology. (Formerly

NBS). See OIW.

NMS: Network Management Station. The system responsible for managing

a (portion of a) network. The NMS talks to network management

agents, which reside in the managed nodes, via a network management

protocol. See agent.

NOC: Network Operations Center. Any center tasked with the

operational aspects of a production network. These tasks include

monitoring and control, trouble-shooting, user assistance, and so on.

NSAP: Network Service Access Point. The point at which the OSI

Network Service is made available to a Transport entity. The NSAPs

are identified by OSI Network Addresses.

NSF: National Science Foundation. Sponsors of the NSFNET.

NSFNET: National Science Foundation NETwork. A collection of local,

regional, and mid-level networks in the U.S. tied together by a

high-speed backbone. NSFNET provides scientists access to a number

of supercomputers across the country.

OIW: Workshop for Implementors of OSI. Frequently called NIST OIW or

the NIST Workshop, this is the North American regional forum at which

OSI implementation agreements are decided. It is equivalent to EWOS

in Europe and AOW in the Pacific.

ONC(tm): Open Network Computing. A distributed applications

architecture promoted and controlled by a consortium led by Sun

Microsystems.

OSI: Open Systems Interconnection. An international standardization

program to facilitate communications among computers from different

manufacturers. See ISO.

OSI Network Address: The address, consisting of up to 20 octets, used

to locate an OSI Transport entity. The address is formatted into an

Initial Domain Part which is standardized for each of several

addressing domains, and a Domain Specific Part which is the

responsibility of the addressing authority for that domain.

OSI Presentation Address: The address used to locate an OSI

Application entity. It consists of an OSI Network Address and up to

three selectors, one each for use by the Transport, Session, and

Presentation entities.

OSPF: Open Shortest Path First. A "Proposed Standard" IGP for the

Internet. See IGP.

PCI: Protocol Control Information. The protocol information added by

an OSI entity to the service data unit passed down from the layer

above, all together forming a Protocol Data Unit (PDU).

PDU: Protocol Data Unit. This is OSI terminology for "packet." A

PDU is a data object exchanged by protocol machines (entities) within

a given layer. PDUs consist of both Protocol Control Information

(PCI) and user data.

Physical Layer: The OSI layer that provides the means to activate and

use physical connections for bit transmission. In plain terms, the

Physical Layer provides the procedures for transferring a single bit

across a Physical Media.

Physical Media: Any means in the physical world for transferring

signals between OSI systems. Considered to be outside the OSI Model,

and therefore sometimes referred to as "Layer 0." The physical

connector to the media can be considered as defining the bottom

interface of the Physical Layer, i.e., the bottom of the OSI

Reference Model.

ping: Packet internet groper. A program used to test reachability of

destinations by sending them an ICMP echo request and waiting for a

reply. The term is used as a verb: "Ping host X to see if it is up!"

port: The abstraction used by Internet transport protocols to

distinguish among multiple simultaneous connections to a single

destination host. See selector.

POSI: Promoting Conference for OSI. The OSI "800-pound gorilla" in

Japan. Consists of executives from the six major Japanese computer

manufacturers and Nippon Telephone and Telegraph. They set policies

and commit resources to promote OSI.

PPP: Point-to-Point Protocol. The successor to SLIP, PPP provides

router-to-router and host-to-network connections over both

synchronous and asynchronous circuits. See SLIP.

Presentation Address: See OSI Presentation Address.

Presentation Layer: The OSI layer that determines how Application

information is represented (i.e., encoded) while in transit between

two end systems.

PRMD: Private Management Domain. An X.400 Message Handling System

private organization mail system. Example: NASAmail. See ADMD.

protocol: A formal description of messages to be exchanged and rules

to be followed for two or more systems to exchange information.

proxy: The mechanism whereby one system "fronts for" another system

in responding to protocol requests. Proxy systems are used in

network management to avoid having to implement full protocol stacks

in simple devices, such as modems.

proxy ARP: The technique in which one machine, usually a router,

answers ARP requests intended for another machine. By "faking" its

identity, the router accepts responsibility for routing packets to

the "real" destination. Proxy ARP allows a site to use a single IP

address with two physical networks. Subnetting would normally be a

better solution.

PSN: Packet Switch Node. The modern term used for nodes in the

ARPANET and MILNET. These used to be called IMPs (Interface Message

Processors). PSNs are currently implemented with BBN C30 or C300

minicomputers.

RARE: Reseaux Associes pour la Recherche Europeenne. European

association of research networks.

RARP: Reverse Address Resolution Protocol. The Internet protocol a

diskless host uses to find its Internet address at startup. RARP

maps a physical (hardware) address to an Internet address. See ARP.

RBOC: Regional Bell Operating Company. See BOC.

repeater: A device which propagates electrical signals from one cable

to another without making routing decisions or providing packet

filtering. In OSI terminology, a repeater is a Physical Layer

intermediate system. See bridge and router.

RFC: Request For Comments. The document series, begun in 1969, which

describes the Internet suite of protocols and related experiments.

Not all (in fact very few) RFCs describe Internet standards, but all

Internet standards are written up as RFCs.

RFS: Remote File System. A distributed file system, similar to NFS,

developed by AT&T and distributed with their UNIX System V operating

system. See NFS.

RIP: Routing Information Protocol. An Interior Gateway Protocol

(IGP) supplied with Berkeley UNIX.

RIPE: Reseaux IP Europeenne. European continental TCP/IP network

operated by EUnet. See EUnet.

rlogin: A service offered by Berkeley UNIX which allows users of one

machine to log into other UNIX systems (for which they are

authorized) and interact as if their terminals were connected

directly. Similar to Telnet.

ROSE: Remote Operations Service Element. A lightweight RPC protocol,

used in OSI Message Handling, Directory, and Network Management

application protocols.

router: A system responsible for making decisions about which of

several paths network (or Internet) traffic will follow. To do this

it uses a routing protocol to gain information about the network, and

algorithms to choose the best route based on several criteria known

as "routing metrics." In OSI terminology, a router is a Network

Layer intermediate system. See gateway, bridge and repeater.

RPC: Remote Procedure Call. An easy and popular paradigm for

implementing the client-server model of distributed computing. A

request is sent to a remote system to execute a designated procedure,

using arguments supplied, and the result returned to the caller.

There are many variations and suBTleties, resulting in a variety of

different RPC protocols.

RTSE: Reliable Transfer Service Element. A lightweight OSI

application service used above X.25 networks to handshake application

PDUs across the Session Service and TP0. Not needed with TP4, and

not recommended for use in the U.S. except when talking to X.400

ADMDs.

SAP: Service Access Point. The point at which the services of an OSI

layer are made available to the next higher layer. The SAP is named

according to the layer providing the services: e.g., Transport

services are provided at a Transport SAP (TSAP) at the top of the

Transport Layer.

selector: The identifier used by an OSI entity to distinguish among

multiple SAPs at which it provides services to the layer above. See

port.

Session Layer: The OSI layer that provides means for dialogue control

between end systems.

SGMP: Simple Gateway Management Protocol. The predecessor to SNMP.

See SNMP.

SLIP: Serial Line IP. An Internet protocol used to run IP over

serial lines such as telephone circuits or RS-232 cables

interconnecting two systems. SLIP is now being replaced by PPP. See

PPP.

SMDS: Switched Multimegabit Data Service. An emerging high-speed

networking technology to be offered by the telephone companies in the

U.S.

SMI: Structure of Management Information. The rules used to define

the objects that can be accessed via a network management protocol.

See MIB.

SMTP: Simple Mail Transfer Protocol. The Internet electronic mail

protocol. Defined in RFC821, with associated message format

descriptions in RFC822.

SNA: Systems Network Architecture. IBM's proprietary network

architecture.

SNMP: Simple Network Management Protocol. The network management

protocol of choice for TCP/IP-based internets.

SPAG: Standards Promotion and Application Group. A group of European

OSI manufacturers which chooses option subsets and publishes these in

a "Guide to the Use of Standards" (GUS).

SQL: Structured Query Language. The international standard language

for defining and accessing relational databases.

subnet mask: See address mask.

subnetwork: A collection of OSI end systems and intermediate systems

under the control of a single administrative domain and utilizing a

single network access protocol. Examples: private X.25 networks,

collection of bridged LANs.

TCP: Transmission Control Protocol. The major transport protocol in

the Internet suite of protocols providing reliable, connection-

oriented, full-duplex streams. Uses IP for delivery. See TP4.

Telnet: The virtual terminal protocol in the Internet suite of

protocols. Allows users of one host to log into a remote host and

interact as normal terminal users of that host.

three-way-handshake: The process whereby two protocol entities

synchronize during connection establishment.

TP0: OSI Transport Protocol Class 0 (Simple Class). This is the

simplest OSI Transport Protocol, useful only on top of an X.25

network (or other network that does not lose or damage data).

TP4: OSI Transport Protocol Class 4 (Error Detection and Recovery

Class). This is the most powerful OSI Transport Protocol, useful on

top of any type of network. TP4 is the OSI equivalent to TCP.

transceiver: Transmitter-receiver. The physical device that connects

a host interface to a local area network, such as Ethernet. Ethernet

transceivers contain electronics that apply signals to the cable and

sense collisions.

Transport Layer: The OSI layer that is responsible for reliable end-

to-end data transfer between end systems.

UA: User Agent. An OSI application process that represents a human

user or organization in the X.400 Message Handling System. Creates,

submits, and takes delivery of messages on the user's behalf.

UDP: User Datagram Protocol. A transport protocol in the Internet

suite of protocols. UDP, like TCP, uses IP for delivery; however,

unlike TCP, UDP provides for exchange of datagrams without

acknowledgements or guaranteed delivery. See CLTP.

UUCP: UNIX to UNIX Copy Program. A protocol used for communication

between consenting UNIX systems.

XDR: eXternal Data Representation. A standard for machine-

independent data structures developed by Sun Microsystems. Similar

to ASN.1.

X/Open: A group of computer manufacturers that promotes the

development of portable applications based on UNIX. They publish a

document called the X/Open Portability Guide.

X Recommendations: The CCITT documents that describe data

communication network standards. Well-known ones include: X.25

Packet Switching standard, X.400 Message Handling System, and X.500

Directory Services.

The X Window System (TM): A popular window system developed by MIT

and implemented on a number of workstations.

For More Information

As indicated in the introduction, this is only a partial list of

words from the world of interoperability. Yes, you're right, we

didn't list "interoperability" because the jury is still out on

exactly what it means, and we invite you to suggest a definition.

To learn more about these topics, consult the books, standards

documents, bibliographies, periodicals, mailing lists, etc. listed in

"Information Sources" in the December 1989 issue of ConneXions--The

Interoperability Report.

Security Considerations

Security issues are not discussed in this memo.

Authors' Addresses

Ole J. Jacobsen

Interop, Inc.

480 San Antonio Road

Suite 100

Mountain View, CA 94040

Phone: (415) 941-3399

EMail: OLE@CSLI.STANFORD.EDU

Daniel C. Lynch

Interop, Inc.

480 San Antonio Road

Interop, Inc.

480 San Antonio Road

Suite 100

Mountain View, CA 94040

Phone: (415) 941-3399

EMail: Lynch@ISI.EDU

 
 
 
免责声明:本文为网络用户发布,其观点仅代表作者个人观点,与本站无关,本站仅提供信息存储服务。文中陈述内容未经本站证实,其真实性、完整性、及时性本站不作任何保证或承诺,请读者仅作参考,并请自行核实相关内容。
2023年上半年GDP全球前十五强
 百态   2023-10-24
美众议院议长启动对拜登的弹劾调查
 百态   2023-09-13
上海、济南、武汉等多地出现不明坠落物
 探索   2023-09-06
印度或要将国名改为“巴拉特”
 百态   2023-09-06
男子为女友送行,买票不登机被捕
 百态   2023-08-20
手机地震预警功能怎么开?
 干货   2023-08-06
女子4年卖2套房花700多万做美容:不但没变美脸,面部还出现变形
 百态   2023-08-04
住户一楼被水淹 还冲来8头猪
 百态   2023-07-31
女子体内爬出大量瓜子状活虫
 百态   2023-07-25
地球连续35年收到神秘规律性信号,网友:不要回答!
 探索   2023-07-21
全球镓价格本周大涨27%
 探索   2023-07-09
钱都流向了那些不缺钱的人,苦都留给了能吃苦的人
 探索   2023-07-02
倩女手游刀客魅者强控制(强混乱强眩晕强睡眠)和对应控制抗性的关系
 百态   2020-08-20
美国5月9日最新疫情:美国确诊人数突破131万
 百态   2020-05-09
荷兰政府宣布将集体辞职
 干货   2020-04-30
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案逍遥观:鹏程万里
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案神机营:射石饮羽
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案昆仑山:拔刀相助
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案天工阁:鬼斧神工
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案丝路古道:单枪匹马
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案镇郊荒野:与虎谋皮
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案镇郊荒野:李代桃僵
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案镇郊荒野:指鹿为马
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案金陵:小鸟依人
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案金陵:千金买邻
 干货   2019-11-12
 
推荐阅读
 
 
 
>>返回首頁<<
 
靜靜地坐在廢墟上,四周的荒凉一望無際,忽然覺得,淒涼也很美
© 2005- 王朝網路 版權所有