Symbols |
|---|
| 100Base-T: | | A 100 Mbit/s communication method specified in the
IEEE 802.3u-1995 standard. The official name for Fast Ethernet.
|
|---|
| 100Base-TX: | | A specific implementation of 100Base-T designed
to operate over Category 5 UTP cabling.
|
|---|
| 10Base-T: | | A 10 Mbit/s communication method specified in the
IEEE 802.3u-1995 standard.
|
|---|
A |
|---|
| Alias: | | Name of the interface that corresponds to a given
Internet address on a system. Refer to the network map in appendix
B for example usage.
|
|---|
| Autonegotiation: | | A mechanism defined in IEEE 802.3u-1995 whereby
devices sharing a link segment can exchange data and automatically
configure themselves to operate at the highest capability mode shared
between them.
|
|---|
| Autosensing: | | The ability of a LAN card to detect a static speed
of a hub or switch and automatically configure itself to operate
accordingly. This does not require the two-way information exchange
and negotiation process of full autonegotiation.
|
|---|
C |
|---|
| Card Instance Number: | | A number that uniquely identifies a device within
a class. A class of devices is a logical grouping of similar devices.
|
|---|
| CSMA/CD: | | Carrier sense multiple access with collision detection.
The media access method implemented in IEEE 802.3u-1995.
|
|---|
D |
|---|
| Destination Address: | | A field in the message packet format identifying
the end node(s) to which the packet is being sent.
|
|---|
| DLPI | | (Data Link Provider Interface): An industry-standard
definition for message communications to STREAMS-based network interface
drivers.
|
|---|
E |
|---|
| EISA (Extended Industry Standard Architecture): | | A computer bus that connects EISA LAN cards to the
system bus.
|
|---|
| Ethernet: | | A 10 Mbit/s LAN, developed by Digital Equipment
Corporation, Intel, and Xerox Corporation, upon which the IEEE 802.3
network is based.
|
|---|
F |
|---|
| Fast Ethernet: | | A commonly used name applied to 100Base-T.
|
|---|
| Full-Duplex Mode: | | A mode of media utilization whereby data can flow
in both directions simultaneously across the multiple wire pairs
of a physical link. While full-duplex operation is not defined per
se in the IEEE 802.3u-1995 specification, the specification does
define a mechanism for this mode to be autonegotiated between devices
on each end of a link. Full-duplex mode is typically found on switches.
The EISA 10/100Base-TX card does not support full-duplex communications.
|
|---|
H |
|---|
| Half-Duplex Mode: | | The media utilization mode of IEEE 802.3u-1995 networks
whereby data can flow in only one direction at a time across the
multiple wire pairs of a physical link.
|
|---|
| Hardware Path: | | An identifier assigned by the system according to
the physical location (slot) of the card in the hardware backplane.
On Series 800 systems, the I/O subsystem identifies each LAN card
by its hardware path.
|
|---|
| Hostname: | | Name of system on the network. Refer to the network
map in appendix B for example usage.
|
|---|
| Hub: | | A network interconnection device that allows multiple
devices to share a single logical link segment. Hubs are generally
either 10 Mbit/s or 100 Mbit/s devices. Use either a 10Base-T or
100Base-TX hub with the EISA 10/100Base-TX card.
|
|---|
I |
|---|
| IEEE 802.3u-1995 network: | | A 10 or 100 megabit-per-second LAN, specified in
the IEEE 802.3u-1995 Standard for Local Area Networks. It uses the
Carrier Sense Multiple Access/Collision Detection (CSMA/CD) network
access method to give every node equal access to the network.
|
|---|
| IEEE: | | The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers.
A national association, whose activities include publishing standards
applicable to various electronic technologies. The IEEE technical
committees are numbered and grouped by area. For example, the 800
committees study local area network technologies. The 802.3 committee
produced the standard for a CSMA/CD local area network, which has
been adopted by ANSI.
|
|---|
| Internet Address: | | The network address of a computer node. This address
identifies both which network the host is on and which host it is.
Refer to the Installing and Administering LAN/9000 Software
manual for detailed information about network addressing.
|
|---|
| IP Address: | | See Internet Address glossary entry.
|
|---|
L |
|---|
| LAN: | | See Local Area Network.
|
|---|
| Local Area Network (LAN): | | A data communications system that allows a number
of independent devices to communicate with each other.
|
|---|
| Local Network: | | The network to which a node is directly attached.
|
|---|
M |
|---|
| Major Number: | | Unique value that identifies an individual hardware
device.The number for the EISA 10/100Base-TX card floats.
|
|---|
| Maximum Transmission Unit (MTU): | | Largest amount of data that can be transmitted through
that interface. This value does not include the LLC or MAC headers.
|
|---|
N |
|---|
| Network Interface: | | A communication path through which messages can
be sent and received. A hardware network interface has a hardware
device associated with it, such as a LAN or FDDI card. A software
network interface does not include a hardware device, for example
the loopback interface. For every IP address instance, there must
be one network interface configured.
|
|---|
| Network Management Identifier (NMID): | | On HP-UX 10.10 and 10.20, it was a unique ID assigned
by the system for the network management of each network interface.
|
|---|
| Node: | | Any point in a network where services are provided
or communications channels are interconnected. A node could be a
workstation or a server processor.
|
|---|
P |
|---|
| Packet: | | A sequence of binary digits that is transmitted
as a unit in a computer network. A packet usually contains control
information plus data.
|
|---|
| PPA: | | Physical point of attachment.
|
|---|
| Protocol: | | A specification for coding messages exchanged between
two communications processes.
|
|---|
R |
|---|
| RJ-45: | | The name for the connector type used with UTP cabling.
|
|---|
S |
|---|
| Subnet mask: | | A 32-bit mask which, when AND'd with an internet
address, determines a subnetwork address. When the internet address
is AND'd with the subnet mask, the ones in the host portion of the
subnet mask will "overwrite" the corresponding
bits of the host portion of the internet address, resulting in the
subnet address. Refer to the Installing and Administering
LAN/9000 Software manual for detailed information about
subnet masks.
|
|---|
| Subnetwork: | | Small discrete physical networks connected via gateways
which share the same network address space. Refer to the Installing
and Administering LAN/9000 Software manual for detailed
information about subnetworks and subnet addressing.
|
|---|
| Switch: | | A network interconnection device that allows multiple
connected senders and receivers to communicate simultaneously in
contrast to a hub (repeater) where only one device can send at a
time. Some switches have fixed port speeds (10 Mbit/s or 100 Mbit/s)
while others allow port speeds to be configured or autonegotiated.
|
|---|
T |
|---|
| Topology: | | The physical and logical geometry governing placement
of nodes in a computer network. Also, the layout of the transmission
medium for a network.
|
|---|
U |
|---|
| UTP (Unshielded Twisted Pair) Cabling: | | A data cable type consisting of pairs of wires twisted
together without an electrically shielding jacket.
|
|---|