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NETWORK
GLOSSARY
AppleTalk
A communications protocol developed
by Apple Computer to allow networking
between Macintoshes. All Macintosh
computers have a LocalTalk port, running
AppleTalk over a 230K bps serial line.
AppleTalk also runs over Ethernet
(EtherTalk) and Token Ring (TokenTalk)
Auto-Negotiate
Clause 28 of the IEEE 802.3u standard
specifies a MAC sublayer for the
identification of the speed and duplex
mode of connection being supported by a
device. Support of this feature is
optional for individual vendors.
Auto-sense
Ability of a 10/100 Ethernet device
to interpret the speed or duplex mode of
the attached device and to adjust to
that rate. Official term is
Auto-Negotiation in Clause 28 of the
IEEE 802.3u standard.
AUI
Attachment Unit Interface. A 15-pin
shielded, twisted pair Ethernet cable
used (optionally) to connect between
network devices and a MAU.
Autobaud
Automatic determination and matching
of transmission speed.
AWG
American Wire Gauge. A system that
specifies wire size. The gauge varies
inversely with the wire diameter size.
Backbone
The main cable in a network.
Bandwidth on Demand
Feature that allows a remote access
device to initiate a second connection
to a particular site to increase the
amount of data transferred to that site
to increase the desired threshold. The
network manager configuring the remote
access server will specify a number of
bits or a percentage of connection
bandwidth threshold which will trigger
the secondary connection. Multilink PPP
is an emerging standard to allow this
feature to be interoperable, but right
now the only way to ensure correct
operation is to use devices on both end
from the same vendor.
Baseband LAN
A LAN that uses a single carrier
frequency over a single channel.
Ethernet, Token Ring and Arcnet LANs use
baseband transmission.
Baud
Unit of signal frequency in signals
per second. Not synonymous with bits per
second since signals can represent more
than one bit. Baud equals bits per
second only when the signal represents a
single bit.
Binaries
Binary, machine readable forms of
programs that have been compiled or
assembled. As opposed to Source language
forms of programs.
Binary
Characteristic of having only two
states, such as current on and current
off. The binary number system uses only
ones and zeros.
Bitronics
Specification for parallel printing
which allows bidirectional communication
on a Centronics-type interface.
Pioneered by Hewlett-Packard, mainly
used for postscript printers.
Bit
The smallest unit of data processing
information. A bit (or binary digit)
assumes the value of either 1 or 0.
BNC
A standardized connector used with
Thinnet and coaxial cable.
BOOTP
A TCP/IP network protocol that lets
network nodes request configuration
information from a BOOTP "server" node.
bps
Bits per second, units of
transmission speed.
Bridge
A networking device that connects two
LANs and forwards or filters data
packets between them, based on their
destination addresses. Bridges operate
at the data link level (or MAC-layer) of
the OSI reference model, and are
transparent to protocols and to higher
level devices like routers.
Broadband
A data transmission technique
allowing multiple high-speed signals to
share the bandwidth of a single cable
via frequency division multiplexing.
Broadband Network
A network that uses multiple carrier
frequencies to transmit multiplexed
signals on a single cable. Several
networks may coexist on a single cable
without interfering with one another.
Brouter
A device that routes specific
protocols, such as TCP/IP and IPX, and
bridges other protocols, thereby
combining the functions of both routers
and bridges.
Bus
A LAN topology in which all the nodes
are connected to a single cable. All
nodes are considered equal and receive
all transmissions on the medium.
Byte
A data unit of eight bits.
Channel
The data path between two nodes.
CHAP
(Challenge Handshake Authentication
Protocol) Authentication scheme for PPP
where the password not only is required
to begin connection but also is required
during the connection - failure to
provide correct password during either
login or challenge mode will result in
disconnect.
Coaxial Cable
An electrical cable with a solid wire
conductor at its center surrounded by
insulating materials and an outer metal
screen conductor with an axis of
curvature coinciding with the inner
conductor - hence "coaxial." Examples
are standard Ethernet cable and Thinwire
Ethernet cable.
Collision
The result of two network nodes
transmitting on the same channel at the
same time. The transmitted data is not
usable.
Collision Detect
A signal indicating that one or more
stations are contending with the local
station's transmission. The signal is
sent by the Physical layer to the Data
Link layer on an Ethernet/IEEE 802.3
node.
Communication Server
A dedicated, standalone system that
manages communications activities for
other computers.
Console
The terminal used to configure
network devices at boot (start-up) time.
Crosstalk
Noise passed between communications
cables or device elements.
Cut-through
Technique for examining incoming
packets whereby an Ethernet switch looks
only at the first few bytes of a packet
before forwarding or filtering it. This
process is faster than looking at the
whole packet, but it also allows some
bad packets to be forwarded.
CSMA/CD
Carrier Sense Multiple Access with
Collision Detection is the Ethernet
media access method. All network devices
contend equally for access to transmit.
If a device detects another device's
signal while it is transmitting, it
aborts transmission and retries after a
brief pause.
Data Link
A logical connection between two
nodes on the same circuit.
Data Link Layer
Layer 2 of the seven-layer OSI
reference model for communication
between computers on networks. This
layer defines protocols for data packets
and how they are transmitted to and from
each network device. It is a
medium-independent, link-level
communications facility on top of the
Physical layer, and is divided into two
sublayers: medium-access control (MAC)
and logical-link control (LLC).
DECnet™
Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC)
proprietary network architecture, a
system for networking computers. It runs
on point-to-point, X.25 and Ethernet
networks.
Dial on Demand
When a router detects the need to
initiate a dial-up connection to a
remote network, it does so automatically
according to pre-defined parameters set
by the network manager.
Dialback
A security feature that ensures
people do not log into modems that they
shouldn't have access to. When a
connection is requested, the system
checks the user name for validity, then
"dials back" the number associated with
that user name.
Distributed Processing
A system in which each computer or
node in the network performs its own
processing and manages some of its data
while the network facilitates
communications between the nodes.
Domain Name
A domain name is a text name appended
to a host name to form a unique host
name across internets.
Download
The transfer of a file or information
from one network node to another.
Generally refers to transferring a file
from a "big" node, such as a computer,
to a "small" node, such as a terminal
server or printer.
End Node
A node such as a PC that can only
send and receive information for its own
use. It cannot route and forward
information to another node.
Ethernet
The most popular LAN technology in
use today. The IEEE standard 802.3
defines the rules for configuring an
Ethernet network. It is a 10 Mbps,
CSMA/CD baseband network that runs over
thin coax, thick coax, twisted pair or
fiber optic cable.
EtherTalk
Apple Computer's protocol for
Ethernet transmissions.
FDDI
Fiberoptic Data Distribution
Interface. A cable interface capable of
transmitting data at 100 Mbps.
Originally specified for fiber lines,
FDDI can also operate over twisted-pair
cable for short distances.
Fiber-Optic Cable
A transmission medium composed of a
central glass optical fiber cable
surrounded by cladding and an outer
protective sheath. It transmits digital
signals in the form of modulated light
from a laser or LED (light-emitting
diode).
File Server
A computer that stores data for
network users and provides network
access to that data.
Filtering
Process whereby an Ethernet switch or
bridge reads the contents of a packet
and then finds that the packet does not
need to be forwarded, and drops it. A
filtering rate is the rate at which a
device can receive packets and drop them
without any loss of incoming packets or
delay in processing.
Firmware
Alterable programs in semipermanent
storage, e.g., some type of read-only or
flash reprogrammable memory.
Forwarding
Process whereby an Ethernet switch or
bridge reads the contents of a packet
and then passes that packet on to the
appropriate attached segment. A
forwarding rate is the time that it
takes the device to execute all of the
steps.
Flash ROM
See ROM.
Framing
Dividing data for transmission into
groups of bits, and adding a header and
a check sequence to form a frame.
FTP
File Transfer Protocol, a TCP/IP
protocol for file transfer.
Full-Duplex
Independent, simultaneous two-way
transmission in both directions, as
opposed to half-duplex transmission.
Gateway
A device for interconnecting two or
more dissimilar networks. It can
translate all protocol levels from the
Physical layer up through the
Applications layer of the OSI model, and
can therefore interconnect entities that
differ in all details.
Hardware Address
See Network Address.
Header
The initial part of a data packet or
frame containing identifying information
such as the source of the data, its
destination, and length.
Heartbeat
Ethernet defined SQE signal quality
test function.
Hertz (Hz)
A frequency unit equal to one cycle
per second.
Host
Generally a node on a network that
can be used interactively, i.e., logged
into, like a computer.
Host Table
A list of TCP/IP hosts on the network
along with their IP addresses.
IEEE 802.3
The IEEE (Institute of Electrical and
Electronic Engineers) standard that
defines the CSMA/CD media-access method
and the physical and data link layer
specifications of a local area network.
Among others, it includes 10BASE2,
10BASE5, 10BASE-FL and 10BASE-T Ethernet
implementations.
Internet
A series of interconnected local,
regional, national and international
networks, linked using TCP/IP. Internet
links many government, university and
research sites. It provides E-mail,
remote login and file transfer services.
Internetworking
General term used to describe the
industry composed of products and
technologies used to link networks
together.
IP Address
See Network Address.
IPX
Internetwork Packet eXchange, a
NetWare protocol similar to IP (Internet
Protocol).
ISDN
(Integrated Services Digital
Network): All digital service provided
by telephone companies. Provides 144K
bps over a single phone line (divided in
two 64K bps "B" channels and one 16K bps
"D" channel).
ISO Layered Model
The International Standards
Organization (ISO) sets standards for
computers and communications. Its Open
Systems Interconnection (OSI) reference
model specifies how dissimilar computing
devices such as Network Interface Cards
(NICs), bridges and routers exchange
data over a network. The model consists
of seven layers. From lowest to highest,
they are: Physical, Data Link, Network,
Transport, Session, Presentation and
Application. Each layer performs
services for the layer above it.
Jabber
Network error caused by an interface
card placing corrupted data on the
network. Or, an error condition due to
an Ethernet node transmitting longer
packets than allowed.
Kbps
Kilobits per second.
Kermit
A popular file transfer and terminal
emulation program.
LAN
Local Area Network, a data
communications system consisting of a
group of interconnected computers,
sharing applications, data and
peripherals. The geographical area is
usually a building or group of
buildings.
LAT
Local Area Transport, a Digital
Equipment Corporation proprietary
network communication protocol. The
protocol is based on the idea of a
relatively small, known number of hosts
on a local network sending small network
packets at regular intervals. LAT will
not work on a wide area network scale,
as TCP/IP does.
Latency
The delay incurred by a switching or
bridging device between receiving the
frame and forwarding the frame.
Layer
In networks, layers refer to software
protocol levels comprising the
architecture, with each layer performing
functions for the layers above it.
Line Speed
Expressed in bps, the maximum rate at
which data can reliably be transmitted
over a line using given hardware.
Load Balancing
Shifting a user job from a more
heavily loaded resource to a less loaded
resource.
Local Network Interconnect (LNI)
A Port Multiplier, or concentrator
supporting multiple active devices or
communications controllers, either used
standalone or attached to standard
Ethernet cable.
LocalTalk
Apple Computer's proprietary 230 Kbps
baseband network protocol. It uses the
CSMA/CD access method over unshielded
twisted pair wire.
Logical Link
A temporary connection between source
and destination nodes, or between two
processes on the same node.
LPD
Line Printer Daemon, a process on
Berkeley spooler implementations that
provides LPR support.
LPR
The LPR command is used to queue
print jobs on Berkeley queuing systems.
MAU
Medium Attachment Unit, a device used
to convert signals from one Ethernet
medium to another.
Mbps
Megabits per second.
MIB
Management Information Base, a
database of network parameters used by
SNMP and CMIP (Common Management
Information Protocol) to monitor and
change network device settings. It
provides a logical naming of all
information resources on the network
that are pertinent to the network's
management.
MII
Media Independent Interface, New
standard developed for Fast Ethernet in
IEEE 802.3u specification. The Fast
Ethernet equivalent to the AUI in 10
Mbps Ethernet, allowing different types
of Fast Ethernet media to be connected
to a Fast Ethernet device via a common
interface.
MJ
Modular Jack. A jack used for
connecting voice cables to a faceplate,
as for a telephone.
MMJ
Modified Modular Jack. These are the
6-pin connectors used to connect serial
terminal lines to terminal devices. MMJs
can be distinguished from the similar
RJ12 jacks by having a side-locking tab,
rather than a center-mounted one.
Modem
A modulator-demodulator device for
changing transmission signals from
digital to analog for transmission over
phone lines. Used in pairs, one is
required at each end of the line.
MOP
Maintenance Operations Protocol, a
DEC protocol used for remote
communications between hosts and
servers.
Multicast
A multicast is a message that is sent
out to multiple devices on the network
by a host.
Multilink PPP
The ability of a dialup device to
allocate more than one channel of
bandwidth to a particular connection.
Generally, this is termed to be the
ability of an ISDN device to bond two
B-channels together into a single data
pipe, but some vendors can perform the
same function with asychronous dial-up
connections over modems by having a
second connection initiated to support
the additional bandwidth requirements.
Multiplexer
A device that allows several users to
share a single circuit. It funnels
different data streams into a single
stream. At the other end of the
communications link, another multiplexer
reverses the process by splitting the
data stream back into the original
streams.
Multiplexing
Transmitting multiple signals
simultaneously on a single channel.
Multiport Repeater
A repeater, either standalone or
connected to standard Ethernet cable,
for interconnecting up to eight Thinwire
Ethernet segments.
Name Server
Software that runs on network hosts
charged with translating (or resolving)
text-style names into numeric IP
addresses.
NCP
Network Control Program, a program
run on VMS machines to configure local
network hardware and remote network
devices.
NetWare
A Novell developed Network Operating
System (NOS). Provides file and printer
sharing among networks of Personal
Computers (PCs). Each NetWare network
must have at least one file server, and
access to other resources is dependent
on connecting to and logging into the
file server. The file server controls
user logins and access to other network
clients, such as user PCs, print
servers, modem/fax servers, disk/file
servers, etc.
NetBIOS/NetBEUI
Microsoft's networking protocols for
its LAN Manager and Windows NT products.
Network
An interconnected system of computers
that can communicate with each other and
share files, data and resources.
Network Address
Every node on a network has one or
more addresses associated with it,
including at least one fixed hardware
address such as "ae-34-2c-1d-69-f1"
assigned by the device's manufacturer.
Most nodes also have protocol specific
addresses assigned by a network manager.
Network Management
Administrative services for managing
a network, including configuring and
tuning, maintaining network operation,
monitoring network performance, and
diagnosing network problems.
NIC
Network Interface Card, an adapter
card that is inserted into a computer,
and contains the necessary software and
electronics to enable the station to
communicate over the network.
Node
Any intelligent device connected to
the network. This includes terminal
servers, host computers, and any other
devices (such as printers and terminals)
that are directly connected to the
network. A node can be thought of as any
device that has a "hardware address."
NOS
Network Operating System, the
software for a network that runs in a
file server and controls access to files
and other resources from multiple users.
It provides security and administrative
tools. Novell's NetWare, Banyan's VINES
and IBM's LAN Server are NOS examples.
Open System Interconnect (OSI)
See "ISO."
Packet
A series of bits containing data and
control information, including source
and destination node addresses,
formatted for transmission from one node
to another.
PAP
(Password Authentication Protocol)
Authentication scheme for PPP links. A
password can be specified for both
devices on a remote link. Failure to
authenticate will result in a dropped
connection prior to start of data
transmission.
Physical Address
An address identifying a single node.
Physical Layer
Layer 1, the bottom layer of the OSI
model, is implemented by the physical
channel. The Physical layer insulates
Layer 2, the Data Link layer, from
medium-dependent physical
characteristics such as baseband,
broadband or fiber-optic transmission.
Layer 1 defines the protocols that
govern transmission media and signals.
Point-to-Point
A circuit connecting two nodes only,
or a configuration requiring a separate
physical connection between each pair of
nodes.
Port
The physical connector on a device
enabling the connection to be made.
Port Multiplier
A concentrator providing connection
to a network for multiple devices.
PostScript
A printer/display protocol developed
by Adobe Corp. PostScript is an actual
printing and programming language to
display text and graphics. Unlike
line/ASCII printers, which print
character input verbatim, PostScript
printers accept and interpret an entire
PostScript page before printing it.
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.
Print Server
A dedicated computer that manages
printers and print requests from other
nodes on the network.
PROM
Programmable ROM, a read-only memory
whose data content can be altered.
Protocol
Any standard method of communicating
over a network.
Remote Access
Access to network resources not
located on the same physical Ethernet.
(Physical Ethernet here refers to an
entire site network topology.)
Remote Control
Form of remote access where a device
dialing in assumes control of another
network node - all keystrokes on the
remote are translated into keystrokes on
the network node. Used primarily with
IPX protocol.
Remote Node
Form of remote access where the
device dialing in acts as a peer on the
target network. Used with both IP and
IPX protocols.
Repeater
A repeater is a network device that
repeats signals from one cable onto one
or more other cables, while restoring
signal timing and waveforms.
Ring
A network topology in which the nodes
are connected in a closed loop. Data is
transmitted from node to node around the
loop, always in the same direction.
RMON
SNMP-based standard for reporting
various network conditions. RMON has 10
different management groups which
provide detailed information about a
network.
Rlogin
Rlogin is an application that
provides a terminal interface between
UNIX hosts using the TCP/IP network
protocol. Unlike Telnet, Rlogin assumes
the remote host is (or behaves like) a
UNIX machine
ROM
Read-Only Memory, a memory device
that retains its information even when
power to it is removed. A ROM version of
a network device does not need to
download, since the ROM contains the
entire executable code and thus never
needs to reload it. Frequently the ROM
is provided as "flash ROM", which can be
reprogrammed by downloading if the user
chooses.
Router
Device capable of
filtering/forwarding packets based upon
data link layer information. Whereas a
bridge or switch may only read MAC layer
addresses to filter, routers are able to
read data such as IP addresses and route
accordingly.
RTEL
Lantronix's "reverse Telnet" software
allows hosts using TCP/IP to establish a
session with a device attached to a
terminal server port.
Server
A computer that provides resources to
be shared on the network, such as files
(file server) or terminals (terminal
server).
Session
A connection to a network service.
Shared Ethernet
Ethernet configuration in which a
number of segments are bound together in
a single collision domain. Hubs produce
this type of configuration where only
one node can transmit at a time.
SLIP
Serial Line Internet Protocol, a
protocol for running TCP/IP over serial
lines.
SNA
Systems Network Architecture. IBM's
layered protocols for mainframe
communications.
SNMP
Simple Network Management Protocol,
allows a TCP/IP host running an SNMP
application to query other nodes for
network-related statistics and error
conditions. The other hosts, which
provide SNMP agents, respond to these
queries and allow a single host to
gather network statistics from many
other network nodes.
Source Code
Programs in an uncompiled or
unassembled form.
Spanning Tree
An algorithm used by bridges to
create a logical topology that connects
all network segments, and ensures that
only one path exists between any two
stations.
Store and Forward
Technique for examining incoming
packets on an Ethernet switch or bridge
whereby the whole packet is read before
forwarding or filtering takes place.
Store and forward is a slightly slower
process than cut-through, but it does
ensure that all bad or misaligned
packets are eliminated from the network
by the switching device.
SPX
Sequential Packet exchange. Novell's
implementation of SPP (Sequential Packet
Protocol).
SQE
Ethernet-defined signal quality test
function, frequently called "heartbeat."
Switch
Multiport Ethernet device designed to
increase network performance by allowing
only essential traffic on the attached
individual Ethernet segments. Packets
are filtered or forwarded based upon
their source and destination addresses.
T-Connector
A T-shaped device with two female and
one male BNC connectors.
TCP/IP
Transmission Control Protocol (TCP)
and Internet Protocol (IP) are the
standard network protocols in UNIX
environments. They are almost always
implemented and used together and called
TCP/IP.
Telnet
Telnet is an application that
provides a terminal interface between
hosts using the TCP/IP network protocol.
It has been standardized so that
"telnetting" to any host should give one
an interactive terminal session,
regardless of the remote host type or
operating system. Note that this is very
different from the LAT software, which
allows only local network access to LAT
hosts only.
10BASE2
Ethernet running on thin coax network
cable.
10BASE5
Ethernet running on Thickwire network
cable.
10BASE-T
Ethernet running on unshielded
twisted pair (UTP) cable. Note that
10BASE-T is a point-to-point network
media, with one end of the cable
typically going to a repeater/hub and
the other to the network device.
Terminal Server
A concentrator that facilitates
communication between hosts and
terminals.
Terminator
Used on both ends of a standard
Ethernet or Thinwire Ethernet segment,
this special connector provides the 50
ohm termination resistance needed for
the cable.
TFTP
Trivial File Transfer Protocol. On
computers that run the TCP/IP networking
software, TFTP is used to quickly send
files across the network with fewer
security features than FTP.
Thickwire
Half-inch diameter coax cable.
Thinwire
Thin coaxial cable similar to that
used for television/video hookups.
Throughput
The amount of data transmitted
between two points in a given amount of
time, e.g., 10 Mbps.
Token
The character sequence or frame,
passed in sequence from node to node, to
indicate that the node controlling it
has the right to transmit for a given
amount of time.
Token Ring
Developed by IBM, this 4 or 16 Mbps
network uses a ring topology and a
token-passing access method.
Topology
The arrangement of the nodes and
connecting hardware that comprises the
network. Types include ring, bus, star
and tree.
Transceiver
The actual device that interfaces
between the network and the local node.
The term generally refers to any
connector, such as a MAU, that actively
converts signals between the network and
the local node.
Transceiver Cable
Cable that attaches a device either
to a standard or thin coax Ethernet
segment.
Twisted-Pair Cable
Inexpensive, multiple-conductor cable
comprised of one or more pairs of 18 to
24 gauge copper strands. The strands are
twisted to improve protection against
electromagnetic and radio frequency
interference. The cable, which may be
either shielded or unshielded, is used
in low-speed communications, as
telephone cable. It is used only in
baseband networks because of its narrow
bandwidth.
Unix
A multitasking, multiuser computer
operating system developed by AT&T.
Several versions exist, e.g., the
Berkeley version.
UTP
Unshielded twisted pair, one or more
cable pairs surrounded by insulation.
UTP is commonly used as telephone wire.
Wide Area Network (WAN)
A network using common carrier
transmission services for transmission
of data over a large geographical area.
Workgroup Switching
Configuration in which a number of
users are connected to an Ethernet
network via a switch. Switching allows
each user to get greater throughput than
would be available through a hub.
X.25 Gateway Access Protocol
Allows a node not directly connected
to a public data network to access the
facilities of that network through an
intermediary gateway node. X.25 is the
protocol standard governing
packet-switched networks.
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