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- Network Working Group G. Malkin, Editor
- Request for Comments: 1983 Xylogics
- FYI: 18 August 1996
- Obsoletes: 1392
- Category: Informational
-
-
- Internet Users' Glossary
-
-
- Status of this Memo
-
- This memo provides information for the Internet community. This memo
- does not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of
- this memo is unlimited.
-
-
- Abstract
-
- There are many networking glossaries in existence. This glossary
- concentrates on terms which are specific to the Internet. Naturally,
- there are entries for some basic terms and acronyms because other
- entries refer to them.
-
-
- Acknowledgements
-
- This document is the work of the User Glossary Working Group of the
- User Services Area of the Internet Engineering Task Force. I would
- especially like to thank Ryan Moats/InterNIC for his careful review
- and many contributions to this document.
-
-
- Table of Contents
-
- non-letter . . 2 I . . . . . . . 26 R . . . . . . . 46
- A . . . . . . . 2 J . . . . . . . 33 S . . . . . . . 49
- B . . . . . . . 7 K . . . . . . . 33 T . . . . . . . 52
- C . . . . . . . 10 L . . . . . . . 33 U . . . . . . . 55
- D . . . . . . . 14 M . . . . . . . 35 V . . . . . . . 57
- E . . . . . . . 18 N . . . . . . . 39 W . . . . . . . 57
- F . . . . . . . 20 O . . . . . . . 42 X . . . . . . . 59
- G . . . . . . . 22 P . . . . . . . 43 Y . . . . . . . 60
- H . . . . . . . 23 Q . . . . . . . 46 Z . . . . . . . 60
-
- References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
- Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
- Editor's Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 1]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- Glossary
-
- 10Base2
- A physical layer communications specification for 10Mbps, baseband
- data transmission over a coaxial cable (Thinnet) with a maximum
- cable segment length of 200 meters.
-
- 10Base5
- A physical layer communications specification for 10Mbps, baseband
- data transmission over a coaxial cable (Thicknet) with a maximum
- cable segment length of 500 meters.
-
- 10BaseF
- A physical layer communications specification for 10Mbps, baseband
- data transmission over a fiber-optic cable.
-
- 10BaseT
- A physical layer communications specification for 10Mbps, baseband
- data transmission over a twisted-pair copper wire.
-
- 802.x
- The set of IEEE standards for the definition of LAN protocols.
- See also: IEEE.
-
- 822
- See: RFC 822
-
- :-)
- This odd symbol is one of the ways a person can portray "mood" in
- the very flat medium of computers--by using "smiley faces". This
- is "metacommunication", and there are literally hundreds of such
- symbols, from the obvious to the obscure. This particular example
- expresses "happiness". Don't see it? Tilt your head to the left
- 90 degrees. Smiles are also used to denote sarcasm.
- [Source: ZEN]
-
- abstract syntax
- A description of a data structure that is independent of machine-
- oriented structures and encodings.
- [Source: RFC1208]
-
- Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1)
- The language used by the OSI protocols for describing abstract
- syntax. This language is also used to encode SNMP packets. ASN.1
- is defined in ISO documents 8824.2 and 8825.2. See also: Basic
- Encoding Rules.
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 2]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- Acceptable Use Policy (AUP)
- Many transit networks have policies which restrict the use to
- which the network may be put. For example, some networks may only
- be used for non-commercial purposes. Some AUPs limit the type of
- material which can be made available to the public (e.g.,
- pornographic material). Enforcement of AUPs varies with the
- network. See also: netiquette.
-
- Access Control List (ACL)
- Most network security systems operate by allowing selective use of
- services. An Access Control List is the usual means by which
- access to, and denial of, services is controlled. It is simply a
- list of the services available, each with a list of the hosts
- permitted to use the service.
-
- ACK
- See: Acknowledgment
-
- acknowledgment (ACK)
- A type of message sent to indicate that a block of data arrived at
- its destination without error. See also: Negative
- Acknowledgement.
- [Source: NNSC]
-
- ACL
- See: Access Control List
-
- AD
- See: Administrative Domain
-
- address
- There are four types of addresses in common use within the
- Internet. They are email address; IP, internet or Internet
- address; hardware or MAC address; and URL. See also: email
- address, IP address, internet address, MAC address, Uniform
- Resource Locator.
-
- address mask
- A bit mask used to identify which bits in an IP address correspond
- to the network and subnet portions of the address. This mask is
- often referred to as the subnet mask because the network portion
- of the address (i.e., the network mask) can be determined by the
- encoding inherent in an IP address. See also: Classless Inter-
- domain Routing.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 3]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- address resolution
- Conversion of a network-layer address (e.g. IP address) into the
- corresponding physical address (e.g., MAC address). See also: IP
- address, MAC address.
-
- Address Resolution Protocol (ARP)
- Used to dynamically discover the low level physical network
- hardware address that corresponds to the high level IP address for
- a given host. ARP is limited to physical network systems that
- support broadcast packets that can be heard by all hosts on the
- network. See also: proxy ARP, Reverse Address Resolution
- Protocol.
-
- Administrative Domain (AD)
- A collection of hosts and routers, and the interconnecting
- network(s), managed by a single administrative authority.
-
- Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA)
- An agency of the U.S. Department of Defense responsible for the
- development of new technology for use by the military. ARPA
- (formerly known as DARPA, nee ARPA) was responsible for funding
- much of the development of the Internet we know today, including
- the Berkeley version of Unix and TCP/IP.
- [Source: NNSC]
-
- Advanced Research Projects Agency Network (ARPANET)
- A pioneering longhaul network funded by ARPA. Now retired, it
- served as the basis for early networking research as well as a
- central backbone during the development of the Internet. The
- ARPANET consisted of individual packet switching computers
- interconnected by leased lines. See also: Advanced Research
- Projects Agency.
- [Source: FYI4]
-
- 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.
- [Source: RFC1208]
-
- alias
- A name, usually short and easy to remember, that is translated
- into another name, usually long and difficult to remember.
-
- American National Standards Institute (ANSI)
- This organization is responsible for approving U.S. standards in
- many areas, including computers and communications. Standards
- approved by this organization are often called ANSI standards
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 4]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- (e.g., ANSI C is the version of the C language approved by ANSI).
- ANSI is a member of ISO. See also: International Organization for
- Standardization.
- [Source: NNSC]
-
- American Standard Code for Information Interchange (ASCII)
- A standard character-to-number encoding widely used in the
- computer industry. See also: EBCDIC.
-
- anonymous FTP
- Anonymous FTP allows a user to retrieve documents, files,
- programs, and other archived data from anywhere in the Internet
- without having to establish a userid and password. By using the
- special userid of "anonymous" the network user will bypass local
- security checks and will have access to publicly accessible files
- on the remote system. See also: archive site, File Transfer
- Protocol, World Wide Web.
-
- ANSI
- See: American National Standards Institute
-
- API
- See: Application Program Interface
-
- Appletalk
- A networking protocol developed by Apple Computer for
- communication between Apple Computer products and other computers.
- This protocol is independent of the network layer on which it is
- run. Current implementations exist for Localtalk, a 235Kb/s local
- area network; and Ethertalk, a 10Mb/s local area network.
- [Source: NNSC]
-
- application
- A program that performs a function directly for a user. FTP, mail
- and Telnet clients are examples of network applications.
-
- application layer
- The top layer of the network protocol stack. The application
- layer is concerned with the semantics of work (e.g. formatting
- electronic mail messages). How to represent that data and how to
- reach the foreign node are issues for lower layers of the network.
- [Source: MALAMUD]
-
- Application Program Interface (API)
- A set of calling conventions which define how a service is invoked
- through a software package.
- [Source: RFC1208]
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 5]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- archie
- A system to automatically gather, index and serve information on
- the Internet. The initial implementation of archie provided an
- indexed directory of filenames from all anonymous FTP archives on
- the Internet. Later versions provide other collections of
- information. See also: archive site, Gopher, Prospero, Wide Area
- Information Servers.
-
- archive site
- A machine that provides access to a collection of files across the
- Internet. For example, an anonymous FTP archive site provides
- access to arcived material via the FTP protocol. WWW servers can
- also serve as archive sites. See also: anonymous FTP, archie,
- Gopher, Prospero, Wide Area Information Servers, World Wide Web.
-
- ARP
- See: Address Resolution Protocol
-
- ARPA
- See: Advanced Research Projects Agency
-
- ARPANET
- See: Advanced Research Projects Agency Network
-
- AS
- See: Autonomous System
-
- ASCII
- See: American Standard Code for Information Interchange
-
- ASN.1
- See: Abstract Syntax Notation One
-
- assigned numbers
- The RFC [STD2] which documents the currently assigned values from
- several series of numbers used in network protocol
- implementations. This RFC is updated periodically and, in any
- case, current information can be obtained from the Internet
- Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA). If you are developing a
- protocol or application that will require the use of a link,
- socket, port, protocol, etc., please contact the IANA to receive a
- number assignment. See also: Internet Assigned Numbers Authority,
- STD.
- [Source: STD2]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 6]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM)
- A standard which defines high-load, high-speed (1.544Mbps through
- 1.2Gbps), fixed-size packet (cell) switching with dynamic
- bandwidth allocation. ATM is also known as "fast packet."
-
- ATM
- See: Asynchronous Transfer Mode
-
- AUP
- See: Acceptable Use Policy
-
- authentication
- The verification of the identity of a person or process.
- [Source: MALAMUD]
-
- Autonomous System (AS)
- A collection of routers under a single administrative authority
- using a common Interior Gateway Protocol for routing packets.
-
- backbone
- The top level in a hierarchical network. Stub and transit
- networks which connect to the same backbone are guaranteed to be
- interconnected. See also: stub network, transit network.
-
- bandwidth
- Technically, the difference, in Hertz (Hz), between the highest
- and lowest frequencies of a transmission channel. However, as
- typically used, the amount of data that can be sent through a
- given communications circuit.
-
- bang path
- A series of machine names used to direct electronic mail from one
- user to another, typically by specifying an explicit UUCP path
- through which the mail is to be routed. See also: email address,
- mail path, UNIX-to-UNIX CoPy.
-
- baseband
- A transmission medium through which digital signals are sent
- without complicated frequency shifting. In general, only one
- communication channel is available at any given time. Ethernet is
- an example of a baseband network. See also: broadband, Ethernet.
- [Source: NNSC]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 7]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- Basic Encoding Rules (BER)
- 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. See also: Abstract Syntax Notation One.
- [Source: NNSC]
-
- BBS
- See: Bulletin Board System
-
- BCNU
- Be Seein' You
-
- BCP
- The newest subseries of RFCs which are written to describe Best
- Current Practices in the Internet. Rather than specifying a
- protocol, these documents specify the best ways to use the
- protocols and the best ways to configure options to ensure
- interoperability between various vendors' products. BCPs carry
- the endorsement of the IESG. See also: Request For Comments,
- Internet Engineering Steering Group.
-
- BER
- See: Basic Encoding Rules
-
- Berkeley Internet Name Daemon (BIND)
- Implementation of a DNS server developed and distributed by the
- University of California at Berkeley. Many Internet hosts run
- BIND, and it is the ancestor of many commercial BIND
- implementations. See also: Domain Name System.
-
- Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD)
- Implementation of the UNIX operating system and its utilities
- developed and distributed by the University of California at
- Berkeley. "BSD" is usually preceded by the version number of the
- distribution, e.g., "4.3 BSD" is version 4.3 of the Berkeley UNIX
- distribution. Many Internet hosts run BSD software, and it is the
- ancestor of many commercial UNIX implementations.
- [Source: NNSC]
-
- BGP
- See: Border Gateway Protocol
-
- big-endian
- A format for storage or transmission of binary data in which the
- most significant bit (or byte) comes first. The term comes from
- "Gulliver's Travels" by Jonathan Swift. The Lilliputians, being
- very small, had correspondingly small political problems. The
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 8]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- Big-Endian and Little-Endian parties debated over whether soft-
- boiled eggs should be opened at the big end or the little end.
- See also: little-endian.
- [Source: RFC1208]
-
- binary
- 11001001
-
- BIND
- See: Berkeley Internet Name Daemon
-
- Birds Of a Feather (BOF)
- A Birds Of a Feather (flocking together) is an informal discussion
- group. It is formed, often ad hoc, to consider a specific issue
- and, therefore, has a narrow focus. See also: Working Group.
-
- Bitnet
- An academic computer network that provides interactive electronic
- mail and file transfer services, using a store-and-forward
- protocol, based on IBM Network Job Entry protocols. Bitnet-II
- encapsulates the Bitnet protocol within IP packets and depends on
- the Internet to route them.
-
- BOF
- See: Birds Of a Feather
-
- BOOTP
- The Bootstrap Protocol, described in RFC 1542, is used for booting
- diskless nodes. See also: Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol,
- Reverse Address Resolution Protocol.
-
- Border Gateway Protocol (BGP)
- The Border Gateway Protocol is an exterior gateway protocol
- defined in RFC 1771. It's design is based on experience gained
- with EGP, as defined in RFC 904, and EGP usage in the NSFNET
- Backbone, as described in RFCs 1092 and 1093. See also: Exterior
- Gateway Protocol.
-
- bounce
- The return of a piece of mail because of an error in its delivery.
- [Source: ZEN]
-
- bridge
- A device which forwards traffic between network segments based on
- datalink layer information. These segments would have a common
- network layer address. See also: gateway, router.
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 9]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- broadband
- A transmission medium capable of supporting a wide range of
- frequencies. It can carry multiple signals by dividing the total
- capacity of the medium into multiple, independent bandwidth
- channels, where each channel operates only on a specific range of
- frequencies. See also: baseband.
-
- broadcast
- A special type of multicast packet which all nodes on the network
- are always willing to receive. See also: multicast, unicast.
-
- broadcast storm
- An incorrect packet broadcast onto a network that causes multiple
- hosts to respond all at once, typically with equally incorrect
- packets which causes the storm to grow exponentially in severity.
- See also: Ethernet meltdown.
-
- brouter
- A device which bridges some packets (i.e. forwards based on
- datalink layer information) and routes other packets (i.e.
- forwards based on network layer information). The bridge/route
- decision is based on configuration information. See also: bridge,
- router.
-
- BSD
- See: Berkeley Software Distribution
-
- BTW
- By The Way
-
- Bulletin Board System (BBS)
- A computer, and associated software, which typically provides
- electronic messaging services, archives of files, and any other
- services or activities of interest to the bulletin board system's
- operator. Although BBS's have traditionally been the domain of
- hobbyists, an increasing number of BBS's are connected directly to
- the Internet, and many BBS's are currently operated by government,
- educational, and research institutions. See also: Electronic
- Mail, Internet, Usenet.
- [Source: NWNET]
-
- Campus Wide Information System (CWIS)
- A CWIS makes information and services publicly available on campus
- via kiosks, and makes interactive computing available via kiosks,
- interactive computing systems and campus networks. Services
- routinely include directory information, calendars, bulletin
- boards, databases.
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 10]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- CCIRN
- See: Coordinating Committee for Intercontinental Research Networks
-
- CCITT
- See: Comite Consultatif International de Telegraphique et
- Telephonique
-
- CERT
- See: Computer Emergency Response Team
-
- checksum
- A computed value which is dependent upon the contents of a packet.
- This value is sent along with the packet when it is transmitted.
- The receiving system computes a new checksum based upon the
- received data and compares this value with the one sent with the
- packet. If the two values are the same, the receiver has a high
- degree of confidence that the data was received correctly. See
- also: Cyclic Redundancy Check.
- [Source: NNSC]
-
- CIDR
- See: Classless Inter-domain Routing
-
- circuit switching
- A communications paradigm in which a dedicated communication path
- is established between two hosts, and on which all packets travel.
- The telephone system is an example of a circuit switched network.
- See also: connection-oriented, connectionless, packet switching.
-
- Classless Inter-domain Routing (CIDR)
- A proposal, set forth in RFC 1519, to allocate IP addresses so as
- to allow the addresses to be aggregated when advertised as routes.
- It is based on the elimination of intrinsic IP network addresses;
- that is, the determination of the network address based on the
- first few bits of the IP address. See also: IP address, network
- address, supernet.
-
- client
- A computer system or process that requests a service of another
- computer system or process. A workstation requesting the contents
- of a file from a file server is a client of the file server. See
- also: client-server model, server.
- [Source: NNSC]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 11]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- client-server model
- A common way to describe the paradigm of many network protocols.
- Examples include the name-server/name-resolver relationship in DNS
- and the file-server/file-client relationship in NFS. See also:
- client, server, Domain Name System, Network File System.
-
- CNI
- See: Coalition for Networked Information
-
- Coalition for Networked Information (CNI)
- A consortium formed by American Research Libraries, CAUSE, and
- EDUCOM (no, they are not acronyms) to promote the creation of, and
- access to, information resources in networked environments in
- order to enrich scholarship and enhance intellectual productivity.
-
- Comite Consultatif International de Telegraphique et Telephonique (
- CCITT)
- This organization is now part of the International
- Telecommunications Union and is responsible for making technical
- recommendations about telephone and data communications systems.
- Every four years CCITT holds plenary sessions where they adopt new
- standards; the most recent was in 1992. Recently, the ITU
- reorganized and CCITT was renamed the ITU-TSS. See also:
- International Telecommunications Union - Telecommunications
- Standards Sector.
-
- Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT)
- The CERT was formed by ARPA in November 1988 in response to the
- needs exhibited during the Internet worm incident. The CERT
- charter is to work with the Internet community to facilitate its
- response to computer security events involving Internet hosts, to
- take proactive steps to raise the community's awareness of
- computer security issues, and to conduct research targeted at
- improving the security of existing systems. CERT products and
- services include 24-hour technical assistance for responding to
- computer security incidents, product vulnerability assistance,
- technical documents, and tutorials. In addition, the team
- maintains a number of mailing lists (including one for CERT
- Advisories), and provides an anonymous FTP server, at "cert.org",
- where security-related documents and tools are archived. The CERT
- may be reached by email at "cert@cert.org" and by telephone at
- +1-412-268-7090 (24-hour hotline). See also: Advanced Research
- Projects Agency, worm.
-
- congestion
- Congestion occurs when the offered load exceeds the capacity of a
- data communication path.
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 12]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- connection-oriented
- The data communication method in which communication proceeds
- through three well-defined phases: connection establishment, data
- transfer, connection release. TCP is a connection-oriented
- protocol. See also: circuit switching, connectionless, packet
- switching, Transmission Control Protocol.
-
- connectionless
- The data communication method in which communication occurs
- between hosts with no previous setup. Packets between two hosts
- may take different routes, as each is independent of the other.
- UDP is a connectionless protocol. See also: circuit switching,
- connection-oriented, packet switching, User Datagram Protocol.
-
- Coordinating Committee for Intercontinental Research Networks (CCIRN)
- A committee that includes the United States FNC and its
- counterparts in North America and Europe. Co-chaired by the
- executive directors of the FNC and the European Association of
- Research Networks (RARE), the CCIRN provides a forum for
- cooperative planning among the principal North American and
- European research networking bodies. See also: Federal Networking
- Council, RARE.
- [Source: MALAMUD]
-
- core gateway
- Historically, one of a set of gateways (routers) operated by the
- Internet Network Operations Center at Bolt, Beranek and Newman
- (BBN). The core gateway system formed a central part of Internet
- routing in that all groups must advertise paths to their networks
- from a core gateway.
- [Source: MALAMUD]
-
- Corporation for Research and Educational Networking (CREN)
- This organization was formed in October 1989, when Bitnet and
- CSNET (Computer + Science NETwork) were combined under one
- administrative authority. CSNET is no longer operational, but
- CREN still runs Bitnet. See also: Bitnet.
- [Source: NNSC]
-
- cracker
- A cracker is an individual who attempts to access computer systems
- without authorization. These individuals are often malicious, as
- opposed to hackers, and have many means at their disposal for
- breaking into a system. See also: hacker, Computer Emergency
- Response Team, Trojan Horse, virus, worm.
-
- CRC
- See: cyclic redundancy check
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 13]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- CREN
- See: Corporation for Research and Educational Networking
-
- CU-SeeMe
- Pronnounced "See you, See me," CU-SeeMe is a publicly available
- videoconferencing program developed at Cornell University. It
- allows anyone with audio/video capabilites and an Internet
- connection to videoconference with anyone else with the same
- capabilities. It also allows multiple people to tie into the same
- videoconference.
-
- CWIS
- See: Campus Wide Information system
-
- Cyberspace
- A term coined by William Gibson in his fantasy novel Neuromancer
- to describe the "world" of computers, and the society that gathers
- around them.
- [Source: ZEN]
-
- Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC)
- A number derived from a set of data that will be transmitted. By
- recalculating the CRC at the remote end and comparing it to the
- value originally transmitted, the receiving node can detect some
- types of transmission errors. See also: checksum.
- [Source: MALAMUD]
-
- DANTE
- A non-profit company founded in July 1993 to help the European
- research community enhance their networking facilities. It
- focuses on the establishment of a high-speed computer network
- infrastructure.
-
- DARPA
- Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
- See: Advanced Research Projects Agency
-
- Data Encryption Key (DEK)
- Used for the encryption of message text and for the computation of
- message integrity checks (signatures). See also: encryption.
-
- Data Encryption Standard (DES)
- A popular, standard encryption scheme. See also: encryption,
- Pretty Good Privacy, RSA.
-
- datagram
- A self-contained, independent entity of data carrying sufficient
- information to be routed from the source to the destination
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 14]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- computer without reliance on earlier exchanges between this source
- and destination computer and the transporting network. See also:
- frame, packet.
- [Source: J. Postel]
-
- DCA
- See: Defense Information Systems Agency
-
- DCE
- Data Circuit-terminating Equipment
-
- DCE
- See: Distributed Computing Environment
-
- DDN
- See: Defense Data Network
-
- DDN NIC
- See: Defense Data Network Network Information Center
-
- DECnet
- A proprietary network protocol designed by Digital Equipment
- Corporation. The functionality of each Phase of the
- implementation, such as Phase IV and Phase V, is different.
-
- default route
- A routing table entry which is used to direct packets addressed to
- networks not explicitly listed in the routing table.
- [Source: MALAMUD]
-
- Defense Data Network (DDN)
- A global communications network serving the US Department of
- Defense composed of MILNET, other portions of the Internet, and
- classified networks which are not part of the Internet. The DDN
- is used to connect military installations and is managed by the
- Defense Information Systems Agency. See also: Defense Information
- Systems Agency.
-
- Defense Data Network Network Information Center (DDN NIC)
- Previously called "The NIC", the DDN NIC's primary responsibility
- was the assignment of Internet network addresses and Autonomous
- System numbers, the administration of the root domain, and
- providing information and support services to the Internet for the
- DDN. Since the creation of the InterNIC, the DDN NIC performs
- these functions only for the DDN. See also: Autonomous System,
- network address, Internet Registry, InterNIC, Network Information
- Center, Request For Comments.
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 15]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA)
- Formerly called the Defense Communications Agency (DCA), this is
- the government agency responsible for managing the DDN portion of
- the Internet, including the MILNET. Currently, DISA administers
- the DDN, and supports the user assistance services of the DDN NIC.
- See also: Defense Data Network.
-
- DEK
- See: Data Encryption Key
-
- DES
- See: Data Encryption Standard
-
- dialup
- A temporary, as opposed to dedicated, connection between machines
- established over a phone line (analog or ISDN). See also:
- Integrated Services Digital Network.
-
- Directory Access Protocol
- X.500 protocol used for communication between a Directory User
- Agent and a Directory System Agent.
- [Source: MALAMUD]
-
- Directory System Agent (DSA)
- 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.
- [Source: RFC1208]
-
- Directory User Agent (DUA)
- 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.
- [Source: RFC1208]
-
- DISA
- See: Defense Information Systems Agency
-
- Distributed Computing Environment (DCE)
- 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 Digital, IBM and Hewlett Packard.
- [Source: RFC1208]
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 16]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- distributed database
- A collection of several different data repositories that looks
- like a single database to the user. A prime example in the
- Internet is the Domain Name System.
-
- DIX Ethernet
- See: Ethernet
-
- DNS
- See: Domain Name System
-
- domain
- "Domain" is a heavily overused term in the Internet. It can be
- used in the Administrative Domain context, or the Domain Name
- context. See also: Administrative Domain, Domain Name System.
-
- Domain Name System (DNS)
- The DNS is a general purpose distributed, replicated, data query
- service. The principal use is the lookup of host IP addresses
- based on host names. The style of host names now used in the
- Internet is called "domain name", because they are the style of
- names used to look up anything in the DNS. Some important domains
- are: .COM (commercial), .EDU (educational), .NET (network
- operations), .GOV (U.S. government), and .MIL (U.S. military).
- Most countries also have a domain. The country domain names are
- based on ISO 3166. For example, .US (United States), .UK (United
- Kingdom), .AU (Australia). See also: Fully Qualified Domain Name,
- Mail Exchange Record.
-
- dot address (dotted decimal notation)
- Dot address refers to the common notation for IP addresses of the
- form A.B.C.D; where each letter represents, in decimal, one byte
- of a four byte IP address. See also: IP address.
- [Source: FYI4]
-
- DSA
- See: Directory System Agent
-
- DTE
- Data Terminal Equipment
-
- DUA
- See: Directory User Agent
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 17]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- dynamic adaptive routing
- Automatic rerouting of traffic based on a sensing and analysis of
- current actual network conditions. NOTE: this does not include
- cases of routing decisions taken on predefined information.
- [Source: J. Postel]
-
- E1
- The basic building block for European multi-megabit data rates,
- with a bandwidth of 2.048Mbps. See also: T1.
-
- E3
- A European standard for transmitting data at 57.344Mbps. See
- also: T3.
-
- EARN
- European Academic and Research Network. See: Trans-European
- Research and Education Networking Association.
-
- EBCDIC
- See: Extended Binary Coded Decimal Interchange Code
-
- Ebone
- A pan-European backbone service.
-
- EFF
- See: Electronic Frontier Foundation
-
- EGP
- See: Exterior Gateway Protocol
-
- Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)
- A foundation established to address social and legal issues
- arising from the impact on society of the increasingly pervasive
- use of computers as a means of communication and information
- distribution.
-
- Electronic Mail (email)
- A system whereby a computer user can exchange messages with other
- computer users (or groups of users) via a communications network.
- Electronic mail is one of the most popular uses of the Internet.
- [Source: NNSC]
-
- email
- See: Electronic mail
-
- email address
- The domain-based or UUCP address that is used to send electronic
- mail to a specified destination. For example an editor's address
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 18]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- is "gmalkin@xylogics.com". See also: bang path, mail path, UNIX-
- to-UNIX CoPy.
- [Source: ZEN]
-
- encapsulation
- The technique used by layered protocols in which a layer adds
- header information to the protocol data unit (PDU) from the layer
- above. For example, in Internet terminology, a packet would
- contain a header from the physical layer, followed by a header
- from the datalink layer (e.g. Ethernet), followed by a header
- from the network layer (IP), followed by a header from the
- transport layer (e.g. TCP), followed by the application protocol
- data.
- [Source: RFC1208]
-
- encryption
- Encryption is the manipulation of a packet's data in order to
- prevent any but the intended recipient from reading that data.
- There are many types of data encryption, and they are the basis of
- network security. See also: Data Encryption Standard.
-
- error checking
- The examination of received data for transmission errors. See
- also: checksum, Cyclic Redundancy Check.
-
- Ethernet
- A 10-Mb/s standard for LANs, initially developed by Xerox, and
- later refined by Digital, Intel and Xerox (DIX). All hosts are
- connected to a coaxial cable where they contend for network access
- using a Carrier Sense Multiple Access with Collision Detection
- (CSMA/CD) paradigm. See also: 802.x, Local Area Network, token
- ring.
-
- Ethernet meltdown
- An event that causes saturation, or near saturation, on an
- Ethernet. It usually results from illegal or misrouted packets
- and typically lasts only a short time. See also: broadcast storm.
- [Source: COMER]
-
- Extended Binary Coded Decimal Interchange Code (EBCDIC)
- A standard character-to-number encoding used primarily by IBM
- computer systems. See also: ASCII.
-
- Exterior Gateway Protocol (EGP)
- A protocol which distributes routing information to the routers
- which connect autonomous systems. The term "gateway" is
- historical, as "router" is currently the preferred term. There is
- also a routing protocol called EGP defined in RFC 904. See also:
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 19]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- Autonomous System, Border Gateway Protocol, Interior Gateway
- Protocol.
-
- eXternal Data Representation (XDR)
- A standard for machine independent data structures developed by
- Sun Microsystems and defined in RFCs 1014 and 1832. It is similar
- to ASN.1. See also: Abstract Syntax Notation One.
- [Source: RFC1208]
-
- FARNET
- A non-profit corporation, established in 1987, whose mission is to
- advance the use of computer networks to improve research and
- education.
-
- FAQ
- Frequently Asked Question
-
- FDDI
- See: Fiber Distributed Data Interface
-
- Federal Information Exchange (FIX)
- One of the connection points between the American governmental
- internets and the Internet.
- [Source: SURA]
-
- Federal Networking Council (FNC)
- The coordinating group of representatives from those federal
- agencies involved in the development and use of federal
- networking, especially those networks using TCP/IP and the
- Internet. Current members include representatives from DOD, DOE,
- ARPA, NSF, NASA, and HHS. See also: Advanced Research Projects
- Agency, National Science Foundation.
-
- Fiber Distributed Data Interface (FDDI)
- A high-speed (100Mb/s) LAN standard. The underlying medium is
- fiber optics, and the topology is a dual-attached, counter-
- rotating token ring. See also: Local Area Network, token ring.
- [Source: RFC1208]
-
- file transfer
- The copying of a file from one computer to another over a computer
- network. See also: File Transfer Protocol, Kermit, Gopher, World
- Wide Web.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 20]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- File Transfer Protocol (FTP)
- A protocol which allows a user on one host to access, and transfer
- files to and from, another host over a network. Also, FTP is
- usually the name of the program the user invokes to execute the
- protocol. See also: anonymous FTP.
-
- finger
- A protocol, defined in RFC 1288, that allows information about a
- system or user on a system to be retrived. Finger also refers to
- the commonly used program which retrieves this information.
- Information about all logged in users, as well is information
- about specific users may be retrieved from local or remote
- systems. Some sites consider finger to be a security risk and
- have either disabled it, or replaced it with a simple message.
-
- FIX
- See: Federal Information Exchange
-
- flame
- A strong opinion and/or criticism of something, usually as a frank
- inflammatory statement, in an electronic mail message. It is
- common to precede a flame with an indication of pending fire (i.e.
- FLAME ON!). Flame Wars occur when people start flaming other
- people for flaming when they shouldn't have. See also: Electronic
- Mail, Usenet.
-
- FLEA
- See: Four Letter Extended Acronym
-
- FNC
- See: Federal Networking Council
-
- Four Letter Extended Acronym (FLEA)
- A recognition of the fact that there are far too many TLAs. See
- also: Three Letter Acronym.
-
- FQDN
- See: Fully Qualified Domain Name
-
- fragment
- A piece of a packet. When a router is forwarding an IP packet to
- a network that has a maximum transmission unit smaller than the
- packet size, it is forced to break up that packet into multiple
- fragments. These fragments will be reassembled by the IP layer at
- the destination host. See also: Maximum Transmission Unit.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 21]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- fragmentation
- The IP process in which a packet is broken into smaller pieces to
- fit the requirements of a physical network over which the packet
- must pass. See also: reassembly.
-
- frame
- A frame is a datalink layer "packet" which contains the header and
- trailer information required by the physical medium. That is,
- network layer packets are encapsulated to become frames. See
- also: datagram, encapsulation, packet.
-
- freenet
- Community-based bulletin board system with email, information
- services, interactive communications, and conferencing. Freenets
- are funded and operated by individuals and volunteers -- in one
- sense, like public television. They are part of the National
- Public Telecomputing Network (NPTN), an organization based in
- Cleveland, Ohio, devoted to making computer telecommunication and
- networking services as freely available as public libraries.
- [Source: LAQUEY]
-
- FTP
- See: File Transfer Protocol
-
- Fully Qualified Domain Name (FQDN)
- The FQDN is the full name of a system, rather than just its
- hostname. For example, "venera" is a hostname and
- "venera.isi.edu" is an FQDN. See also: hostname, Domain Name
- System.
-
- FYI
- For Your Information
-
- FYI
- A subseries of RFCs that are not technical standards or
- descriptions of protocols. FYIs convey general information about
- topics related to TCP/IP or the Internet. See also: Request For
- Comments.
-
- gated
- Gatedaemon. A program which supports multiple routing protocols
- and protocol families. It may be used for routing, and makes an
- effective platform for routing protocol research. The software is
- freely available by anonymous FTP from "gated.cornell.edu".
- Pronounced "gate-dee". See also: Exterior Gateway Protocol, Open
- Shortest-Path First, Routing Information Protocol, routed.
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 22]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- gateway
- The term "router" is now used in place of the original definition
- of "gateway". Currently, a gateway is a communications
- device/program which passes data between networks having similar
- functions but dissimilar implementations. This should not be
- confused with a protocol converter. By this definition, a router
- is a layer 3 (network layer) gateway, and a mail gateway is a
- layer 7 (application layer) gateway. See also: mail gateway,
- router, protocol converter.
-
- Gopher
- A distributed information service, developed at the University of
- Minnesota, that makes hierarchical collections of information
- available across the Internet. Gopher uses a simple protocol,
- defined in RFC 1436, that allows a single Gopher client to access
- information from any accessible Gopher server, providing the user
- with a single "Gopher space" of information. Public domain
- versions of the client and server are available. See also:
- archie, archive site, Prospero, Wide Area Information Servers.
-
- GOSIP
- See: Government OSI Profile
-
- Government OSI Profile (GOSIP)
- A subset of OSI standards specific to U.S. Government
- procurements, designed to maximize interoperability in areas where
- plain OSI standards are ambiguous or allow excessive options.
-
- hacker
- A person who delights in having an intimate understanding of the
- internal workings of a system, computers and computer networks in
- particular. The term is often misused in a pejorative context,
- where "cracker" would be the correct term. See also: cracker.
-
- header
- The portion of a packet, preceding the actual data, containing
- source and destination information. It may also error checking and
- other fields. A header is also the part of an electronic mail
- message which precedes the body of a message and contains, among
- other things, the message originator, date and time. See also:
- Electronic Mail, packet, error checking.
-
- heterogeneous network
- A network running multiple network layer protocols. See also:
- DECnet, IP, IPX, XNS, homogeneous network.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 23]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- hierarchical routing
- The complex problem of routing on large networks can be simplified
- by reducing the size of the networks. This is accomplished by
- breaking a network into a hierarchy of networks, where each level
- is responsible for its own routing. The Internet has, basically,
- three levels: the backbones, the mid-levels, and the stub
- networks. The backbones know how to route between the mid-levels,
- the mid-levels know how to route between the sites, and each site
- (being an autonomous system) knows how to route internally. See
- also: Autonomous System, Exterior Gateway Protocol, Interior
- Gateway Protocol, stub network, transit network.
-
- High Performance Computing and Communications (HPCC)
- High performance computing encompasses advanced computing,
- communications, and information technologies, including scientific
- workstations, supercomputer systems, high speed networks, special
- purpose and experimental systems, the new generation of large
- scale parallel systems, and application and systems software with
- all components well integrated and linked over a high speed
- network.
- [Source: HPCC]
-
- High Performance Parallel Interface (HIPPI)
- An emerging ANSI standard which extends the computer bus over
- fairly short distances at speeds of 800 and 1600 Mb/s. HIPPI is
- often used in a computer room to connect a supercomputer to
- routers, frame buffers, mass-storage peripherals, and other
- computers. See also: American National Standards Institute
- [Source: MALAMUD]
-
- HIPPI
- See: High Performance Parallel Interface
-
- HTML
- See: Hypertext Markup Language
-
- homogeneous network
- A network running a single network layer protocol. See also:
- DECnet, IP, IPX, XNS, heterogeneous network.
-
- hop
- A term used in routing. A path to a destination on a network is a
- series of hops, through routers, away from the origin.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 24]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- host
- A computer that allows users to communicate with other host
- computers on a network. Individual users communicate by using
- application programs, such as electronic mail, Telnet and FTP.
- [Source: NNSC]
-
- host address
- See: internet address
-
- hostname
- The name given to a machine. See also: Fully Qualified Domain
- Name.
- [Source: ZEN]
-
- host number
- See: host address
-
- HPCC
- See: High Performance Computing and Communications
-
- HTTP
- See: Hypertext Transfer Protocol
-
- hub
- A device connected to several other devices. In ARCnet, a hub is
- used to connect several computers together. In a message handling
- service, a hub is used for the transfer of messages across the
- network.
- [Source: MALAMUD]
-
- hyperlink
- A pointer within a hypertext document which points (links) to
- another document, which may or may not also be a hypertext
- document. See also: hypertext.
-
- hypertext
- A document, written in HTML, which contains hyperlinks to other
- documents, which may or may not also be hypertext documents.
- Hypertext documents are usually retrieved using WWW. See also:
- hyperlink, Hypertext Markup Language, World Wide Web.
-
- Hypertext Markup Language (HTML)
- The language used to create hypertext documents. It is a subset
- of SGML and includes the mechanisms to establish hyperlinks to
- other documents. See also: hypertext, hyperlink, Standardized
- General Markup Language.
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 25]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP)
- The protocol used by WWW to transfer HTML files. A formal
- standard is still under development in the IETF. See also:
- hyperlink, hypertext, Hypertext Markup Language, World Wide Web.
-
- I-D
- See: Internet-Draft
-
- IAB
- See: Internet Architecture Board
-
- IANA
- See: Internet Assigned Numbers Authority
-
- ICMP
- See: Internet Control Message Protocol
-
- IEEE
- Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
-
- IEEE 802
- See: 802.x
-
- IEN
- See: Internet Experiment Note
-
- IEPG
- See: Internet Engineering Planning Group
-
- IESG
- See: Internet Engineering Steering Group
-
- IETF
- See: Internet Engineering Task Force
-
- IINREN
- See: Interagency Interim National Research and Education Network
-
- IGP
- See: Interior Gateway Protocol
-
- IMHO
- In My Humble Opinion
-
- IMR
- See: Internet Monthly Report
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 26]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN)
- 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. See also: CCITT.
- [Source: RFC1208]
-
- Interagency Interim National Research and Education Network (IINREN)
- An evolving operating network system. Near term (1992-1996)
- research and development activities will provide for the smooth
- evolution of this networking infrastructure into the future
- gigabit NREN.
- [Source: HPCC]
-
- Interior Gateway Protocol (IGP)
- A protocol which distributes routing information to the routers
- within an autonomous system. The term "gateway" is historical, as
- "router" is currently the preferred term. See also: Autonomous
- System, Exterior Gateway Protocol, Open Shortest-Path First,
- Routing Information Protocol.
-
- Intermediate System (IS)
- An OSI system which performs network layer forwarding. It is
- analogous to an IP router. See also: Open Systems
- Interconnection, router.
-
- Intermediate System-Intermediate System (IS-IS)
- The OSI IGP. See also: Open Systems Interconnection, Interior
- Gateway Protocol.
-
- International Organization for Standardization (ISO)
- A voluntary, nontreaty organization founded in 1946 which is
- responsible for creating international standards in many areas,
- including computers and communications. Its members are the
- national standards organizations of the 89 member countries,
- including ANSI for the U.S. See also: American National Standards
- Institute, Open Systems Interconnection.
- [Source: TAN]
-
- International Telecommunications Union (ITU)
- An agency of the United Nations which coordinates the various
- national telecommunications standards so that people in one
- country can communicate with people in another country.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 27]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- International Telecommunications Union -
- Telecommunications Standards Sector (ITU-TSS)
- The new name for CCITT since the ITU reorganization. The function
- is the same; only the name has been changed
-
- internet
- While an internet is a network, the term "internet" is usually
- used to refer to a collection of networks interconnected with
- routers. See also: network.
-
- Internet
- (note the capital "I") The Internet is the largest internet in the
- world. Is a three level hierarchy composed of backbone networks
- (e.g. Ultranet), mid-level networks (e.g., NEARnet) and stub
- networks. The Internet is a multiprotocol internet. See also:
- backbone, mid-level network, stub network, transit network,
- Internet Protocol.
-
- internet address
- A IP address that uniquely identifies a node on an internet. An
- Internet address (capital "I"), uniquely identifies a node on the
- Internet. See also: internet, Internet, IP address.
-
- Internet Architecture Board (IAB)
-
- The IAB has been many things over the years. Originally the
- Internet Activities Board, it was responsible for the development
- of the protocols which make up the Internet. It later changed its
- name and charter to become the group most responsible for the
- architecture of the Internet, leaving the protocol details to the
- IESG. In June of 1992, it was chartered as a component of the
- Internet Society; this is the charter it holds today. The IAB is
- responsible for approving nominations to the IESG, architectural
- oversight for Internet Standard Protocols, IETF standards process
- oversight and appeals, IANA and RFC activities, and liaison to
- peer standards groups (e.g., ISO). See also: Internet Engineering
- Task Force, Internet Research Task Force, Internet Engineering
- Steering Group, Internet Assigned Numbers Authority, Request for
- Comments.
-
- Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA)
- The central registry for various Internet protocol parameters,
- such as port, protocol and enterprise numbers, and options, codes
- and types. The currently assigned values are listed in the
- "Assigned Numbers" document [STD2]. To request a number
- assignment, contact the IANA at "iana@isi.edu". See also:
- assigned numbers, STD.
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 28]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP)
- ICMP is an extension to the Internet Protocol. It allows for the
- generation of error messages, test packets and informational
- messages related to IP.
- [Source: FYI4]
-
- Internet-Draft (I-D)
- Internet-Drafts are working documents of the IETF, its Areas, and
- its Working Groups. As the name implies, Internet-Drafts are
- draft documents. They are valid for a maximum of six months and
- may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
- time. Very often, I-Ds are precursors to RFCs. See also:
- Internet Engineering Task Force, Request For Comments.
-
- Internet Engineering Planning Group (IEPG)
- A group, primarily composed of Internet service operators, whose
- goal is to promote a globally coordinated Internet operating
- environment. Membership is open to all.
-
- Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG)
- The IESG is composed of the IETF Area Directors and the IETF
- Chair. It provides the first technical review of Internet
- standards and is responsible for day-to-day "management" of the
- IETF. See also: Internet Engineering Task Force.
-
- Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)
- The IETF is a large, open community of network designers,
- operators, vendors, and researchers whose purpose is to coordinate
- the operation, management and evolution of the Internet, and to
- resolve short-range and mid-range protocol and architectural
- issues. It is a major source of proposals for protocol standards
- which are submitted to the IAB for final approval. The IETF meets
- three times a year and extensive minutes are included in the IETF
- Proceedings. See also: Internet, Internet Architecture Board.
- [Source: FYI4]
-
- Internet Experiment Note (IEN)
- A series of reports pertinent to the Internet. IENs were
- published in parallel to RFCs and were intended to be "working
- documents." They have been replaced by Internet-Drafts and are
- currently of historic value only. See also: Internet-Draft,
- Request For Comments.
-
- Internet Monthly Report (IMR)
- Published monthly, the purpose of the Internet Monthly Reports is
- to communicate to the Internet Research Group the accomplishments,
- milestones reached, or problems discovered by the participating
- organizations.
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 29]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- internet number
- See: internet address
-
- Internet Protocol (IP, IPv4)
- The Internet Protocol (version 4), defined in RFC 791, is the
- network layer for the TCP/IP Protocol Suite. It is a
- connectionless, best-effort packet switching protocol. See also:
- packet switching, TCP/IP Protocol Suite, Internet Protocol Version
- 6.
-
- Internet Protocol Version 6 (IPng, IPv6)
- IPv6 (version 5 is a stream protocol used for special
- applications) is a new version of the Internet Protocol which is
- designed to be an evolutionary step from its predecessor, version
- 4. There are many RFCs defining various portions of the protocol,
- its auxiliary protocols, and the transition plan from IPv4. The
- core RFCs are 1883 through 1886. The name IPng (IP next
- generation) is a nod to STNG (Star Trek Next Generation).
-
- Internet Registry (IR)
- The IANA has the discretionary authority to delegate portions of
- its responsibility and, with respect to network address and
- Autonomous System identifiers, has lodged this responsibility with
- an IR. The IR function is performed by the DDN NIC. See also:
- Autonomous System, network address, Defense Data Network...,
- Internet Assigned Numbers Authority.
-
- Internet Relay Chat (IRC)
- A world-wide "party line" protocol that allows one to converse
- with others in real time. IRC is structured as a network of
- servers, each of which accepts connections from client programs,
- one per user. See also: talk.
- [Source: HACKER]
-
- Internet Research Steering Group (IRSG)
- The "governing body" of the IRTF. See also: Internet Research
- Task Force.
- [Source: MALAMUD]
-
- Internet Research Task Force (IRTF)
- The IRTF is chartered by the IAB to consider long-term Internet
- issues from a theoretical point of view. It has Research Groups,
- similar to IETF Working Groups, which are each tasked to discuss
- different research topics. Multi-cast audio/video conferencing
- and privacy enhanced mail are samples of IRTF output. See also:
- Internet Architecture Board, Internet Engineering Task Force,
- Privacy Enhanced Mail.
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 30]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- Internet Society (ISOC)
- The Internet Society is a non-profit, professional membership
- organization which facilitates and supports the technical
- evolution of the Internet, stimulates interest in and educates the
- scientific and academic communities, industry and the public about
- the technology, uses and applications of the Internet, and
- promotes the development of new applications for the system. The
- Society provides a forum for discussion and collaboration in the
- operation and use of the global Internet infrastructure. The
- Internet Society publishes a quarterly newsletter, the Internet
- Society News, and holds an annual conference, INET. The
- development of Internet technical standards takes place under the
- auspices of the Internet Society with substantial support from the
- Corporation for National Research Initiatives under a cooperative
- agreement with the US Federal Government.
- [Source: V. Cerf]
-
- Internetwork Packet eXchange (IPX)
- Novell's protocol used by Netware. A router with IPX routing can
- interconnect LANs so that Novell Netware clients and servers can
- communicate. See also: Local Area Network.
-
- InterNIC
- A five year project, partially supported by the National Science
- Foundation, to provide network information services to the
- networking community. The InterNIC began operations in April of
- 1993 and is now a collaborative project of two organizations:
- AT&T, which provides Directory and Database Services from South
- Plainsfield, NJ; and Network Solutions, Inc., which provides
- Registration Services from their headquarters in Herndon, VA.
- Services are provided via the Internet, and by telephone, FAX, and
- hardcopy.
-
- interoperability
- The ability of software and hardware on multiple machines from
- multiple vendors to communicate meaningfully.
-
- IP (IPv4)
- See: Internet Protocol
-
- IPng (IPv6)
- See: Internet Protocol Version 6
-
- IP address
- The 32-bit address defined by the Internet Protocol in RFC 791.
- It is usually represented in dotted decimal notation. See also:
- dot address, internet address, Internet Protocol, network address,
- subnet address, host address.
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 31]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- IP datagram
- See: datagram
-
- IPX
- See: Internetwork Packet eXchange
-
- IR
- See: Internet Registry
-
- IRC
- See: Internet Relay Chat
-
- IRSG
- See: Internet Research Steering Group
-
- IRTF
- See: Internet Research Task Force
-
- IS
- See: Intermediate System
-
- IS-IS
- See: Intermediate System-Intermediate System
-
- ISDN
- See: Integrated Services Digital Network
-
- ISO
- See: International Organization for Standardization
-
- ISO Development Environment (ISODE)
- Software that allows OSI services to use a TCP/IP network.
- Pronounced eye-so-dee-eee. See also: Open Systems
- Interconnection, TCP/IP Protocol Suite.
-
- ISOC
- See: Internet Society
-
- ISODE
- See: ISO Development Environment
-
- ITU
- See: International Telecommunications Union -
- Telecommunications Standards Sector
-
- ITU-TSS
- See: International Telecommunications Union
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 32]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- JKREY
- Joyce K. Reynolds
-
- KA9Q
- A popular implementation of TCP/IP and associated protocols for
- amateur packet radio systems. See also: TCP/IP Protocol Suite.
- [Source: RFC1208]
-
- Kerberos
- Kerberos is the security system of MIT's Project Athena. It is
- based on symmetric key cryptography. See also: encryption.
-
- Kermit
- A popular file transfer protocol developed by Columbia University.
- Because Kermit runs in most operating environments, it provides an
- easy method of file transfer. Kermit is NOT the same as FTP. See
- also: File Transfer Protocol
- [Source: MALAMUD]
-
- Knowbot
- A "Knowledge Robot" is a program which seeks out information based
- on specified criteria. "Knowbot," as trademarked by CNRI, refers
- specifically to the search engine for Knowbot Information
- Services. See also: Corporation for National Research
- Initiatives, X.500, white pages, whois, netfind.
-
- Knowbot Information Services
- An experimental directory service. See also: white pages, whois,
- X.500.
-
- LAN
- See: Local Area Network
-
- layer
- Communication networks for computers may be organized as a set of
- more or less independent protocols, each in a different layer
- (also called level). The lowest layer governs direct host-to-host
- communication between the hardware at different hosts; the highest
- consists of user applications. Each layer builds on the layer
- beneath it. For each layer, programs at different hosts use
- protocols appropriate to the layer to communicate with each other.
- TCP/IP has five layers of protocols; OSI has seven. The
- advantages of different layers of protocols is that the methods of
- passing information from one layer to another are specified
- clearly as part of the protocol suite, and changes within a
- protocol layer are prevented from affecting the other layers.
- This greatly simplifies the task of designing and maintaining
- communication programs. See also: Open Systems Interconnection,
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 33]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- TCP/IP Protocol Suite.
-
- LDAP
- See: Lightweight Directory Access Protocol
-
- Lightweight Directory Access Protocol
- This protocol provides access for management and browser
- applications that provide read/write interactive access to the
- X.500 Directory. See also: X.500.
-
- link
- A pointer which may be used to retreive the file or data to which
- the pointer points.
-
- list server
- An automated mailing list distribution system. List servers
- handle the administrivia of mailing list maintenance, such as the
- adding and deleting of list members.
-
- little-endian
- A format for storage or transmission of binary data in which the
- least significant byte (bit) comes first. See also: big-endian.
- [Source: RFC1208]
-
- LLC
- See: Logical Link Control
-
- Local Area Network (LAN)
- A data network intended to serve an area of only a few square
- kilometers or less. Because the network is known to cover only a
- small area, optimizations can be made in the network signal
- protocols that permit data rates up to 100Mb/s. See also:
- Ethernet, Fiber Distributed Data Interface, token ring,
- Metropolitan Area Network, Wide Area Network.
- [Source: NNSC]
-
- Logical Link Control (LLC)
- The upper portion of the datalink layer, as defined in IEEE 802.2.
- The LLC sublayer presents a uniform interface to the user of the
- datalink service, usually the network layer. Beneath the LLC
- sublayer is the MAC sublayer. See also: 802.x, layer, Media
- Access Control.
-
- Lurking
- No active participation on the part of a subscriber to an mailing
- list or USENET newsgroup. A person who is lurking is just
- listening to the discussion. Lurking is encouraged for beginners
- who need to get up to speed on the history of the group. See
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 34]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- also: Electronic Mail, mailing list, Usenet.
- [Source: LAQUEY]
-
- Lycos
- Lycos, Inc. is a new venture formed in late June 1995, to develop
- and market the Lycos technology originally developed under the
- direction of Dr. Michael ("Fuzzy") Mauldin at Carnegie Mellon
- University. The part of Lycos you see when you do a search is the
- search engine. "Lycos" comes from Lycosidae, a cosmopolitan
- family of relatively large active ground spiders (Wolf Spiders)
- that catch their prey by pursuit, rather than in a web.
- [Source: Lycos's FAQ]
-
- MAC
- See: Media Access Control
-
- MAC address
- The hardware address of a device connected to a shared media. See
- also: Media Access Control, Ethernet, token ring.
- [Source: MALAMUD]
-
- mail bridge
- A mail gateway that forwards electronic mail between two or more
- networks while ensuring that the messages it forwards meet certain
- administrative criteria. A mail bridge is simply a specialized
- form of mail gateway that enforces an administrative policy with
- regard to what mail it forwards. See also: Electronic Mail, mail
- gateway.
- [Source: NNSC]
-
- Mail Exchange Record (MX Record)
- A DNS resource record type indicating which host can handle mail
- for a particular domain. See also: Domain Name System, Electronic
- Mail.
- [Source: MALAMUD]
-
- mail exploder
- Part of an electronic mail delivery system which allows a message
- to be delivered to a list of addresses. Mail exploders are used
- to implement mailing lists. Users send messages to a single
- address and the mail exploder takes care of delivery to the
- individual mailboxes in the list. See also: Electronic Mail,
- email address, mailing list.
- [Source: RFC1208]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 35]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- mail gateway
- A machine that connects two or more electronic mail systems
- (including dissimilar mail systems) and transfers messages between
- them. Sometimes the mapping and translation can be quite complex,
- and it generally 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. See
- also: Electronic Mail.
- [Source: RFC1208]
-
- mail path
- A series of machine names used to direct electronic mail from one
- user to another. This system of email addressing has been used
- primarily in UUCP networks which are trying to eliminate its use
- altogether. See also: bang path, email address, UNIX-to-UNIX
- CoPy.
-
- mail server
- A software program that distributes files or information in
- response to requests sent via email. Internet examples include
- Almanac and netlib. Mail servers have also been used in Bitnet to
- provide FTP-like services. See also: Bitnet, Electronic Mail,
- FTP.
- [Source: NWNET]
-
- mailing list
- A list of email addresses, used by a mail exploder, to forward
- messages to groups of people. Generally, a mailing list is used
- to discuss certain set of topics, and different mailing lists
- discuss different topics. A mailing list may be moderated. This
- means that messages sent to the list are actually sent to a
- moderator who determines whether or not to send the messages on to
- everyone else. Requests to subscribe to, or leave, a mailing list
- should ALWAYS be sent to the list's "-request" address (e.g.
- ietf-request@cnri.reston.va.us for the IETF mailing list) or
- majordomo server. See also: Electronic Mail, mail exploder, email
- address, moderator, majordomo.
-
- majordomo
- A program which handles mailing list maintenance (affectionately
- known as administrivia) such as adding and removing addresses from
- mailing lists. See also: email address, mailing list.
-
- MAN
- See: Metropolitan Area Network
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 36]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- Management Information Base (MIB)
- The set of parameters an SNMP management station can query or set
- in the SNMP agent of a network device (e.g. router). Standard,
- minimal MIBs have been defined, and vendors often have Private
- enterprise MIBs. In theory, any SNMP manager can talk to any SNMP
- agent with a properly defined MIB. See also: client-server model,
- Simple Network Management Protocol.
- [Source: BIG-LAN]
-
- Martian
- A 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.
- [Source: RFC1208]
-
- Maximum Transmission Unit (MTU)
- The largest frame length which may be sent on a physical medium.
- See also: frame, fragment, fragmentation.
-
- mbone
- The Multicast Backbone is based on IP multicasting using class-D
- addresses. The mbone concept was adopted at the March 1992 IETF
- in San Diego, during which it was used to audiocast to 40 people
- throughout the world. At the following meeting, in Cambridge, the
- name mbone was adopted. Since then the audiocast has become full
- two-way audio/video conferencing using two video channels, four
- audio channels, and involving hundreds of remote users. See also:
- multicast, Internet Engineering Task Force.
-
- MD-2, MD-4, MD-5
- See: Message Digest
-
- Media Access Control (MAC)
- The lower portion of the datalink layer. The MAC differs for
- various physical media. See also: MAC Address, Ethernet, Logical
- Link Control, token ring.
-
- Message Digest (MD-2, MD-4, MD-5)
- Message digests are algorithmic operations, generally performed on
- text, which produce a unique signature for that text. MD-2,
- described in RFC 1319; MD-4, described in RFC 1320; and MD-5,
- described in RFC 1321 all produce a 128-bit signature. They
- differ in their operating speed and resistance to crypto-analytic
- attack. Generally, one must be traded off for the other.
-
- message switching
- See: packet switching
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 37]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- Metropolitan Area Network (MAN)
- A data network intended to serve an area approximating that of a
- large city. Such networks are being implemented by innovative
- techniques, such as running fiber cables through subway tunnels.
- A popular example of a MAN is SMDS. See also: Local Area Network,
- Switched Multimegabit Data Service, Wide Area Network.
- [Source: NNSC]
-
- MIB
- See: Management Information Base
-
- Microcom Networking Protocol (MNP)
- A series of protocols built into most modems which error-check or
- compress data being transmitted over a phone line.
-
- mid-level network
- Mid-level networks (a.k.a. regionals) make up the second level of
- the Internet hierarchy. They are the transit networks which
- connect the stub networks to the backbone networks. See also:
- backbone, Internet, stub network, transit network.
-
- MIME
- See: Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions
-
- MNP
- See: Microcom Networking Protocol
-
- moderator
- A person, or small group of people, who manage moderated mailing
- lists and newsgroups. Moderators are responsible for determining
- which email submissions are passed on to list. See also:
- Electronic Mail, mailing list, Usenet.
-
- MOSPF
- Multicast Open Shortest-Path First. See: Open Shortest-Path First.
-
- MTU
- See: Maximum Transmission Unit
-
- MUD
- See: Multi-User Dungeon
-
- multicast
- A packet with a special destination address which multiple nodes
- on the network may be willing to receive. See also: broadcast,
- unicast.
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 38]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- multihomed host
- A host which has more than one connection to a network. The host
- may send and receive data over any of the links but will not route
- traffic for other nodes. See also: host, router.
- [Source: MALAMUD]
-
- Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME)
- An extension to Internet email which provides the ability to
- transfer non-textual data, such as graphics, audio and fax. See
- also: Electronic Mail
-
- Multi-User Dungeon (MUD)
- Adventure, role playing games, or simulations played on the
- Internet. Devotees call them "text-based virtual reality
- adventures." The games can feature fantasy combat, booby traps
- and magic. Players interact in real time and can change the
- "world" in the game as they play it. Most MUDs are based on the
- Telnet protocol. See also: Telnet.
- [Source: LAQUEY]
-
- MX Record
- See: Mail Exchange Record
-
- NAK
- See: Negative Acknowledgment
-
- name resolution
- The process of mapping a name into its corresponding address. See
- also: Domain Name System.
- [Source: RFC1208]
-
- namespace
- A commonly distributed set of names in which all names are unique.
- [Source: MALAMUD]
-
- National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
- United States governmental body that provides assistance in
- developing standards. Formerly the National Bureau of Standards.
- [Source: MALAMUD]
-
- National Research and Education Network (NREN)
- The NREN is the realization of an interconnected gigabit computer
- network devoted to Hign Performance Computing and Communications.
- See also: HPPC, IINREN.
- [Source: HPCC]
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 39]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- National Science Foundation (NSF)
- A U.S. government agency whose purpose is to promote the
- advancement of science. NSF funds science researchers, scientific
- projects, and infrastructure to improve the quality of scientific
- research. The NSFNET, funded by NSF, was once an essential part
- of academic and research communications. It was a highspeed,
- hierarchical "network of networks." At the highest level, it had
- a backbone network of nodes, interconnected with T3 (45Mbps)
- facilities which spaned the continental United States. Attached
- to that were mid-level networks, and attached to the mid-levels
- were campus and local networks. See also: backbone network, mid-
- level network.
-
- Negative Acknowledgment (NAK)
- Response to the receipt of either a corrupted or unnexpected
- packet of information. See also: Acknowledgement.
-
- netfind
- A research prototype to provide a simple Internet "white pages"
- user directory. Developed at the University of Colorado, Boulder,
- it tries to locate telephone and email information given a
- person's name and a rough description of where the person works.
- See also: Knowbot, whois, white pages, X.500.
- [Source: Ryan Moats]
-
- netiquette
- A pun on "etiquette" referring to proper behavior on a network.
- RFC 1855 (FYI 28) contains a netiquette guide produced by the User
- Services area of the IETF. See also: Acceptable Use Policy,
- Internet Engineering Task Force.
-
- Netnews
- See: Usenet
-
- network
- A computer network is a data communications system which
- interconnects computer systems at various different sites. A
- network may be composed of any combination of LANs, MANs or WANs.
- See also: Local Area Network, Metropolitan Area Network, Wide Area
- Network, internet.
-
- network address
- The network portion of an IP address. For a class A network, the
- network address is the first byte of the IP address. For a class
- B network, the network address is the first two bytes of the IP
- address. For a class C network, the network address is the first
- three bytes of the IP address. In each case, the remainder is the
- host address. In the Internet, assigned network addresses are
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 40]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- globally unique. See also: Internet, IP address, subnet address,
- host address, Internet Registry.
-
- Network File System (NFS)
- A protocol developed by Sun Microsystems, and defined in RFC 1094
- (RFC 1813 defines Version 3), which allows a computer system to
- access files over a network as if they were on its local disks.
- This protocol has been incorporated in products by more than two
- hundred companies, and is now a de facto Internet standard.
- [Source: NNSC]
-
- Network Information Center (NIC)
- A NIC provides information, assistance and services to network
- users. See also: Network Operations Center.
-
- Network Information Services (NIS)
- A set of services, generally provided by a NIC, to assist users in
- using the network. See also: Network Information Center.
-
- Network News Transfer Protocol (NNTP)
- A protocol, defined in RFC 977, for the distribution, inquiry,
- retrieval, and posting of news articles. See also: Usenet.
-
- network mask
- See: address mask
-
- network number
- See: network address
-
- Network Operations Center (NOC)
- A location from which the operation of a network or internet is
- monitored. Additionally, this center usually serves as a
- clearinghouse for connectivity problems and efforts to resolve
- those problems. See also: Network Information Center.
- [Source: NNSC]
-
- Network Time Protocol (NTP)
- A protocol that assures accurate local timekeeping with reference
- to radio and atomic clocks located on the Internet. This protocol
- is capable of synchronizing distributed clocks within milliseconds
- over long time periods. See also: Internet.
- [Source: NNSC]
-
- NFS
- See: Network File System
-
- NIC
- See: Network Information Center
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 41]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- NIC.DDN.MIL
- This is the domain name of the DDN NIC. See also: Defense Data
- Network, Domain Name System, Network Information Center.
-
- NIS
- See: Network Information Services
-
- NIST
- See: National Institute of Standards and Technology
-
- NNTP
- See: Network News Transfer Protocol
-
- NOC
- See: Network Operations Center
-
- Nodal Switching System (NSS)
- Main routing nodes in the NSFnet backbone. See also: backbone,
- National Science Foundation.
- [Source: MALAMUD]
-
- node
- An addressable device attached to a computer network. See also:
- host, router.
-
- NREN
- See: National Research and Education Network
-
- NSF
- See: National Science Foundation
-
- NSS
- See: Nodal Switching System
-
- NTP
- See: Network Time Protocol
-
- OCLC
- See: Online Computer Library Catalog
-
- octet
- An octet is 8 bits. This term is used in networking, rather than
- byte, because some systems have bytes that are not 8 bits long.
-
- Online Computer Library Catalog
- OCLC is a nonprofit membership organization offering computer-
- based services to libraries, educational organizations, and their
- users. The OCLC library information network connects more than
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 42]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- 10,000 libraries worldwide. Libraries use the OCLC System for
- cataloging, interlibrary loan, collection development,
- bibliographic verification, and reference searching.
- [Source: OCLC]
-
- Open Shortest-Path First (OSPF)
- A link state, as opposed to distance vector, routing protocol. It
- is an Internet standard IGP defined in RFCs 1583 and 1793. The
- multicast version, MOSPF, is defined in RFC 1584. See also:
- Interior Gateway Protocol, Routing Information Protocol.
-
- Open Systems Interconnection (OSI)
- A suite of protocols, designed by ISO committees, to be the
- international standard computer network architecture. See also:
- International Organization for Standardization.
-
- OSI
- See: Open Systems Interconnection
-
- OSI Reference Model
- A seven-layer structure designed to describe computer network
- architectures and the way that data passes through them. This
- model was developed by the ISO in 1978 to clearly define the
- interfaces in multivendor networks, and to provide users of those
- networks with conceptual guidelines in the construction of such
- networks. See also: International Organization for
- Standardization.
- [Source: NNSC]
-
- OSPF
- See: Open Shortest-Path First
-
- packet
- The unit of data sent across a network. "Packet" a generic term
- used to describe unit of data at all levels of the protocol stack,
- but it is most correctly used to describe application data units.
- See also: datagram, frame.
-
- Packet InterNet Groper (PING)
- 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!" See also:
- Internet Control Message Protocol.
- [Source: RFC1208]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 43]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- Packet Switch Node (PSN)
- A dedicated computer whose purpose is to accept, route and forward
- packets in a packet switched network. See also: packet switching,
- router.
- [Source: NNSC]
-
- packet switching
- A communications paradigm in which packets (messages) are
- individually routed between hosts, with no previously established
- communication path. See also: circuit switching, connection-
- oriented, connectionless.
-
- PD
- Public Domain
-
- PDU
- See: Protocol Data Unit
-
- PEM
- See: Privacy Enhanced Mail
-
- PGP
- See: Pretty Good Privacy
-
- PING
- See: Packet INternet Groper
-
- Point Of Presence (POP)
- A site where there exists a collection of telecommunications
- equipment, usually digital leased lines and multi-protocol
- routers.
-
- Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP)
- The Point-to-Point Protocol, defined in RFC 1661, provides a
- method for transmitting packets over serial point-to-point links.
- There are many other RFCs which define extensions to the basic
- protocol. See also: Serial Line IP.
- [Source: FYI4]
-
- POP
- See: Post Office Protocol and Point Of Presence
-
- port
- A port is a transport layer demultiplexing value. Each
- application has a unique port number associated with it. See
- also: Transmission Control Protocol, User Datagram Protocol.
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 44]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- Post Office Protocol (POP)
- A protocol designed to allow single user hosts to read electronic
- mail from a server. Version 3, the most recent and most widely
- used, is defined in RFC 1725. See also: Electronic Mail.
-
- Postal Telegraph and Telephone (PTT)
- Outside the USA, PTT refers to a telephone service provider, which
- is usually a monopoly, in a particular country.
-
- postmaster
- The person responsible for taking care of electronic mail
- problems, answering queries about users, and other related work at
- a site. See also: Electronic Mail.
- [Source: ZEN]
-
- PPP
- See: Point-to-Point Protocol
-
- Pretty Good Privacy (PGP)
- A program, developed by Phil Zimmerman, which cryptographically
- protects files and electronic mail from being read by others. It
- may also be used to digitally sign a document or message, thus
- authenticating the creator. See also: encryption, Data Encryption
- Standard, RSA.
-
- Privacy Enhanced Mail (PEM)
- Internet email which provides confidentiality, authentication and
- message integrity using various encryption methods. See also:
- Electronic Mail, encryption.
-
- Prospero
- A distributed filesystem which provides the user with the ability
- to create multiple views of a single collection of files
- distributed across the Internet. Prospero provides a file naming
- system, and file access is provided by existing access methods
- (e.g. anonymous FTP and NFS). The Prospero protocol is also used
- for communication between clients and servers in the archie
- system. See also: anonymous FTP, archie, archive site, Gopher,
- Network File System, Wide Area Information Servers.
-
- protocol
- A formal description of message formats and the rules two
- computers must follow to exchange those messages. Protocols can
- describe low-level details of machine-to-machine interfaces (e.g.,
- the order in which bits and bytes are sent across a wire) or
- high-level exchanges between allocation programs (e.g., the way in
- which two programs transfer a file across the Internet).
- [Source: MALAMUD]
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 45]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- protocol converter
- A device/program which translates between different protocols
- which serve similar functions (e.g. TCP and TP4).
-
- Protocol Data Unit (PDU)
- "PDU" is internationalstandardscomitteespeak for packet. See
- also: packet.
-
- protocol stack
- A layered set of protocols which work together to provide a set of
- network functions. See also: layer, protocol.
-
- 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. See also: Address Resolution Protocol
- [Source: RFC1208]
-
- PSN
- See: Packet Switch Node.
-
- PTT
- See: Postal, Telegraph and Telephone
-
- queue
- A backup of packets awaiting processing.
-
- RARE
- Reseaux Associes pour la Recherche Europeenne. See: Trans-
- European Research and Education Networking Association.
-
- RARP
- See: Reverse Address Resolution Protocol
-
- RBOC
- Regional Bell Operating Company
-
- Read The F*cking Manual (RTFM)
- This acronym is often used when someone asks a simple or common
- question.
-
- Read The Source Code (RTSC)
- This acronym is often used when a software developer asks a
- question about undocumented code.
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 46]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- reassembly
- The IP process in which a previously fragmented packet is
- reassembled before being passed to the transport layer. See also:
- fragmentation.
-
- recursive
- See: recursive
-
- regional
- See: mid-level network
-
- remote login
- Operating on a remote computer, using a protocol over a computer
- network, as though locally attached. See also: Telnet.
-
- Remote Procedure Call (RPC)
- An easy and popular paradigm for implementing the client-server
- model of distributed computing. In general, 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 in various implementations, resulting in
- a variety of different (incompatible) RPC protocols.
- [Source: RFC1208]
-
- repeater
- A device which propagates electrical signals from one cable to
- another. See also: bridge, gateway, router.
-
- Request For Comments (RFC)
- 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. The RFC series of documents is unusual in
- that the proposed protocols are forwarded by the Internet research
- and development community, acting on their own behalf, as opposed
- to the formally reviewed and standardized protocols that are
- promoted by organizations such as CCITT and ANSI. See also: BCP,
- FYI, STD.
-
- Reseaux IP Europeens (RIPE)
- A collaboration between European networks which use the TCP/IP
- protocol suite.
-
- Reverse Address Resolution Protocol (RARP)
- A protocol, defined in RFC 903, which provides the reverse
- function of ARP. RARP maps a hardware (MAC) address to an
- internet address. It is used primarily by diskless nodes when
- they first initialize to find their internet address. See also:
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 47]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- Address Resolution Protocol, BOOTP, internet address, MAC address.
-
- RFC
- See: Request For Comments
-
- RFC 822
- The Internet standard format for electronic mail message headers.
- Mail experts often refer to "822 messages." The name comes from
- RFC 822, which contains the specification. 822 format was
- previously known as 733 format. See also: Electronic Mail.
- [Source: COMER]
-
- RIP
- See: Routing Information Protocol
-
- RIPE
- See: Reseaux IP Europeenne
-
- Round-Trip Time (RTT)
- A measure of the current delay on a network.
- [Source: MALAMUD]
-
- route
- The path that network traffic takes from its source to its
- destination. Also, a possible path from a given host to another
- host or destination.
-
- routed
- Route Daemon. A program which runs under 4.2BSD/4.3BSD UNIX
- systems (and derived operating systems) to propagate routes among
- machines on a local area network, using the RIP protocol.
- Pronounced "route-dee". See also: Routing Information Protocol,
- gated.
-
- router
- A device which forwards traffic between networks. The forwarding
- decision is based on network layer information and routing tables,
- often constructed by routing protocols. See also: bridge,
- gateway, Exterior Gateway Protocol, Interior Gateway Protocol.
-
- routing
- The process of selecting the correct interface and next hop for a
- packet being forwarded. See also: hop, router, Exterior Gateway
- Protocol, Interior Gateway Protocol.
-
- routing domain
- A set of routers exchanging routing information within an
- administrative domain. See also: Administrative Domain, router.
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 48]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- Routing Information Protocol (RIP)
- A distance vector, as opposed to link state, routing protocol. It
- is an Internet standard IGP defined in RFC 1058. See also:
- Interior Gateway Protocol, Open Shortest-Path First.
-
- RPC
- See: Remote Procedure Call
-
- RSA
- A public-key cryptographic system which may be used for encryption
- and authentication. It was invented in 1977 and named for its
- inventors: Ron Rivest, Adi Shamir, and Leonard Adleman. See also:
- encryption, Data Encryption Standard, Pretty Good Privacy.
-
- RTFM
- See: Read The F*cking Manual
-
- RTSC
- See: Read The Source Code
-
- RTT
- See: Round-Trip Time
-
- SDH
- See: Synchronous Digital Hierarchy
-
- Serial Line IP (SLIP)
- A protocol used to run IP over serial lines, such as telephone
- circuits or RS-232 cables, interconnecting two systems. SLIP is
- defined in RFC 1055, but is not an Internet Standard. It is being
- replaced by PPP. See also: Point-to-Point Protocol.
-
- server
- A provider of resources (e.g. file servers and name servers). See
- also: client, Domain Name System, Network File System.
-
- SGML
- See: Standardized Generalized Markup Language
-
- SIG
- Special Interest Group
-
- signature
- The three or four line message at the bottom of a piece of email
- or a Usenet article which identifies the sender. Large signatures
- (over five lines) are generally frowned upon. See also:
- Electronic Mail, Usenet.
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 49]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP)
- A protocol used to transfer electronic mail between computers. It
- is specified in RFC 821, with extensions specified in many other
- RFCs. It is a server to server protocol, so other protocols are
- used to access the messages. See also: Electronic Mail, Post
- Office Protocol, RFC 822.
-
- Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP)
- The Internet standard protocol developed to manage nodes on an IP
- network. The first version is defined in RFC 1157 (STD 15).
- SNMPv2 (version 2) is defined in too many RFCs to list. It is
- currently possible to manage wiring hubs, toasters, jukeboxes,
- etc. See also: Management Information Base.
-
- SLIP
- See: Serial Line IP
-
- SMDS
- See: Switched Multimegabit Data Service
-
- SMI
- See: Structure of Management Information
-
- SMTP
- See: Simple Mail Transfer Protocol
-
- SNA
- See: Systems Network Architecture
-
- snail mail
- A pejorative term referring to the U.S. postal service.
-
- SNMP
- See: Simple Network Management Protocol
-
- SONET
- See: Synchronous Optical NETwork
-
- Standardized Generalized Markup Language (SGML)
- An international standard for the definition of system-
- independent, device-independent methods of representing text in
- electronic form. See also: Hypertext Markup Language.
-
- STD
- A subseries of RFCs that specify Internet standards. The official
- list of Internet standards is in STD 1. See also: Request For
- Comments.
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 50]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- stream-oriented
- A type of transport service that allows its client to send data in
- a continuous stream. The transport service will guarantee that
- all data will be delivered to the other end in the same order as
- sent and without duplicates. See also: Transmission Control
- Protocol.
- [Source: MALAMUD]
-
- Structure of Management Information (SMI)
- The rules used to define the objects that can be accessed via a
- network management protocol. These rules are defined in RFC 1155
- (STD 17). The acronym is pronounced "Ess Em Eye." See also:
- Management Information Base. .br [Source: RFC1208]
-
- stub network
- A stub network only carries packets to and from local hosts. Even
- if it has paths to more than one other network, it does not carry
- traffic for other networks. See also: backbone, transit network.
-
- subnet
- A portion of a network, which may be a physically independent
- network segment, which shares a network address with other
- portions of the network and is distinguished by a subnet number.
- A subnet is to a network what a network is to an internet. See
- also: internet, network.
- [Source: FYI4]
-
- subnet address
- The subnet portion of an IP address. In a subnetted network, the
- host portion of an IP address is split into a subnet portion and a
- host portion using an address (subnet) mask. See also: address
- mask, IP address, network address, host address.
-
- subnet mask
- See: address mask
-
- subnet number
- See: subnet address
-
- supernet
- An aggregation of IP network addresses advertised as a single
- classless network address. For example, given four Class C IP
- networks: 192.0.8.0, 192.0.9.0, 192.0.10.0 and 192.0.11.0, each
- having the intrinsic network mask of 255.255.255.0; one can
- advertise the address 192.0.8.0 with a subnet mask of
- 255.255.252.0. See also: IP address, network address, network
- mask, Classless Inter-domain Routing.
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 51]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- Switched Multimegabit Data Service (SMDS)
- An emerging high-speed datagram-based public data network service
- developed by Bellcore and expected to be widely used by telephone
- companies as the basis for their data networks. See also:
- Metropolitan Area Network.
- [Source: RFC1208]
-
- Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (SDH)
- The European standard for high-speed data communications over
- fiber-optic media. The transmission rates range from 155.52Mbps
- to 2.5Gbps.
-
- Synchronous Optical NETwork (SONET)
- SONET is an international standard for high-speed data
- communications over fiber-optic media. The transmission rates
- range from 51.84Mbps to 2.5Gbps.
-
- Systems Network Architecture (SNA)
- A proprietary networking architecture used by IBM and IBM-
- compatible mainframe computers.
- [Source: NNSC]
-
- T1
- A term for a digital carrier facility used to transmit a DS-1
- formatted digital signal at 1.544 megabits per second.
-
- T3
- A term for a digital carrier facility used to transmit a DS-3
- formatted digital signal at 44.746 megabits per second.
- [Source: FYI4]
-
- TAC
- See: Terminal Access Controller (TAC)
-
- talk
- A protocol which allows two people on remote computers to
- communicate in a real-time fashion. See also: Internet Relay
- Chat.
-
- TCP
- See: Transmission Control Protocol
-
- TCP/IP Protocol Suite
- Transmission Control Protocol over Internet Protocol. This is a
- common shorthand which refers to the suite of transport and
- application protocols which runs over IP. See also: IP, ICMP,
- TCP, UDP, FTP, Telnet, SMTP, SNMP.
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 52]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- TELENET
- The original name for what is now SprintNet. It should not be
- confused with the Telnet protocol or application program.
-
- Telnet
- Telnet is the Internet standard protocol for remote terminal
- connection service. It is defined in RFC 854 and extended with
- options by many other RFCs.
-
- TERENA
- See: Trans-European Research and Education Networking Association
-
- Terminal Access Controller (TAC)
- A device which was once used to connect terminals to the Internet,
- usually using dialup modem connections and the TACACS protocol.
- While the device is no longer in use, TACACS+ is a protocol in
- current use.
-
- terminal emulator
- A program that allows a computer to emulate a terminal. The
- workstation thus appears as a terminal to the remote host.
- [Source: MALAMUD]
-
- terminal server
- A device which connects many terminals to a LAN through one
- network connection. A terminal server can also connect many
- network users to its asynchronous ports for dial-out capabilities
- and printer access. See also: Local Area Network.
-
- Three Letter Acronym (TLA)
- A tribute to the use of acronyms in the computer field. See also:
- Extended Four Letter Acronym.
-
- Time to Live (TTL)
- A field in the IP header which indicates how long this packet
- should be allowed to survive before being discarded. It is
- primarily used as a hop count. See also: Internet Protocol.
- [Source: MALAMUD]
-
- TLA
- See: Three Letter Acronym
-
- TN3270
- A variant of the Telnet program that allows one to attach to IBM
- mainframes and use the mainframe as if you had a 3270 or similar
- terminal.
- [Source: BIG-LAN]
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 53]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- token ring
- A token ring is a type of LAN with nodes wired into a ring. Each
- node constantly passes a control message (token) on to the next;
- whichever node has the token can send a message. Often, "Token
- Ring" is used to refer to the IEEE 802.5 token ring standard,
- which is the most common type of token ring. See also: 802.x,
- Local Area Network.
-
- topology
- A network topology shows the computers and the links between them.
- A network layer must stay abreast of the current network topology
- to be able to route packets to their final destination.
- [Source: MALAMUD]
-
- traceroute
- A program available on many systems which traces the path a packet
- takes to a destination. It is mostly used to debug routing
- problems between hosts. There is also a traceroute protocol
- defined in RFC 1393.
-
- Trans-European Research and Education Networking Association (TERENA)
- TERENA was formed in October 1994 by the merger of RARE and EARN
- to promote and participate in the development of a high quality
- international information and telecommunications infrastructure
- for the benefit of research and education. See also: Reseaux
- Associes pour la Recherche Europeenne, European Academic and
- Research Network.
- [Source: TERENA Statutes]
-
- 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.
- [Source: RFC1208]
-
- transit network
- A transit network passes traffic between networks in addition to
- carrying traffic for its own hosts. It must have paths to at
- least two other networks. See also: backbone, stub network.
-
- Transmission Control Protocol (TCP)
- An Internet Standard transport layer protocol defined in RFC 793.
- It is connection-oriented and stream-oriented, as opposed to UDP.
- See also: connection-oriented, stream-oriented, User Datagram
- Protocol.
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 54]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- Trojan Horse
- A computer program which carries within itself a means to allow
- the creator of the program access to the system using it. See
- also: virus, worm.
-
- TTFN
- Ta-Ta For Now
-
- TTL
- See: Time to Live
-
- tunnelling
- Tunnelling refers to encapsulation of protocol A within protocol
- B, such that A treats B as though it were a datalink layer.
- Tunnelling is used to get data between administrative domains
- which use a protocol that is not supported by the internet
- connecting those domains. See also: Administrative Domain.
-
- twisted pair
- A type of cable in which pairs of conductors are twisted together
- to produce certain electrical properties.
-
- UDP
- See: User Datagram Protocol
-
- unicast
- An address which only one host will recognize. See also:
- broadcast, multicast.
-
- Uniform Resource Locators (URL)
- A URL is a compact (most of the time) string representation for a
- resource available on the Internet. URLs are primarily used to
- retrieve information using WWW. The syntax and semantics for URLs
- are defined in RFC 1738. See also: World Wide Web.
-
- Universal Time Coordinated (UTC)
- This is Greenwich Mean Time.
- [Source: MALAMUD]
-
- UNIX-to-UNIX CoPy (UUCP)
- This was initially a program run under the UNIX operating system
- that allowed one UNIX system to send files to another UNIX system
- via dial-up phone lines. Today, the term is more commonly used to
- describe the large international network which uses the UUCP
- protocol to pass news and electronic mail. See also: Electronic
- Mail, Usenet.
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 55]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- urban legend
- A story, which may have started with a grain of truth, that has
- been embroidered and retold until it has passed into the realm of
- myth. It is an interesting phenonmenon that these stories get
- spread so far, so fast and so often. Urban legends never die,
- they just end up on the Internet! Some legends that periodically
- make their rounds include "The Infamous Modem Tax," "Craig
- Shergold/Brain Tumor/Get Well Cards," and "The $250 Cookie
- Recipe."
- [Source: LAQUEY]
-
- URL
- See: Uniform Resource Locators
-
- Usenet
- A collection of thousands of topically named newsgroups, the
- computers which run the protocols, and the people who read and
- submit Usenet news. Not all Internet hosts subscribe to Usenet
- and not all Usenet hosts are on the Internet. See also: Network
- News Transfer Protocol, UNIX-to-UNIX CoPy.
- [Source: NWNET]
-
- User Datagram Protocol (UDP)
- An Internet Standard transport layer protocol defined in RFC 768.
- It is a connectionless protocol which adds a level of reliability
- and multiplexing to IP. See also: connectionless, Transmission
- Control Protocol.
-
- UTC
- See: Universal Time Coordinated
-
- UUCP
- See: UNIX-to-UNIX CoPy
-
- uudecode
- A program which reverses the effect of uuencode. See also:
- uuencode.
-
- uuencode
- A program which reversibly converts a binary file in ASCII. It is
- used to send binary files via email, which generally does not
- allow (or garbles) the transmission of binary information. The
- original binary can be restored with uudecode. The encoding
- process generally creates an ASCII file larger than the original
- binary, so compressing the binary before running uuencode is
- highly recommended.
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 56]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- Veronica
- A Gopher utility which effectively searches Gopher servers based
- on a user's list of keywords. The name was chosen to be a "mate"
- to another utility named "Archie." It later became an acronym for
- Very Easy Rodent Oriented Netwide Index to Computer Archives. See
- also: archie, Gopher.
-
- virtual circuit
- A network service which provides connection-oriented service
- without necessarily doing circuit-switching. See also:
- connection-oriented.
-
- virus
- A program which replicates itself on computer systems by
- incorporating itself into other programs which are shared among
- computer systems. See also: Trojan Horse, worm.
-
- W3
- See: World Wide Web
-
- WAIS
- See: Wide Area Information Servers
-
- WAN
- See: Wide area network
-
- WebCrawler
- A WWW search engine. The aim of the WebCrawler Project is to
- provide a high-quality, fast, and free Internet search service.
- The WebCrawler may be reached at "http://webcrawler.com/".
- [Source: WebCrawler's "WebCrawler Facts"]
-
- WG
- See: Working Group
-
- white pages
- The Internet supports several databases that contain basic
- information about users, such as e-mail addresses, telephone
- numbers, and postal addresses. These databases can be searched to
- get information about particular individuals. Because they serve
- a function akin to the telephone book, these databases are often
- referred to as "white pages." See also: Knowbot, netfind, whois,
- X.500, InterNIC.
-
- whois
- An Internet program which allows users to query a database of
- people and other Internet entities, such as domains, networks, and
- hosts. The primary database is kept at the InterNIC. The
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 57]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- information stored includes a person's company name, address,
- phone number and email address. The latest version of the
- protocol, WHOIS++, is defined in RFCs 1834 and 1835. See also:
- InterNIC, white pages, Knowbot, netfind, X.500.
-
- Wide Area Information Servers (WAIS)
- A distributed information service which offers simple natural
- language input, indexed searching for fast retrieval, and a
- "relevance feedback" mechanism which allows the results of initial
- searches to influence future searches. Public domain
- implementations are available. See also: archie, Gopher,
- Prospero.
-
- Wide Area Network (WAN)
- A network, usually constructed with serial lines, which covers a
- large geographic area. See also: Local Area Network, Metropolitan
- Area Network.
-
- Working Group (WG)
- A working group, within the IETF, is a group of people who work
- under a charter to achieve a certain goal. That goal may be the
- creation of an Informational document, the creation of a protocol
- specification, or the resolution of problems in the Internet.
- Most working groups have a finite lifetime. That is, once a
- working group has achieved its goal, it disbands. There is no
- official membership for a working group. Unofficially, a working
- group member is somebody who is on that working group's mailing
- list; however, anyone may attend a working group meeting. See
- also: Internet Engineering Task Force, Birds Of a Feather.
-
- World Wide Web (WWW, W3)
- A hypertext-based, distributed information system created by
- researchers at CERN in Switzerland. Users may create, edit or
- browse hypertext documents. The clients and servers are freely
- available.
-
- worm
- A computer program which replicates itself and is self-
- propagating. Worms, as opposed to viruses, are meant to spawn in
- network environments. Network worms were first defined by Shoch &
- Hupp of Xerox in ACM Communications (March 1982). The Internet
- worm of November 1988 is perhaps the most famous; it successfully
- propagated itself on over 6,000 systems across the Internet. See
- also: Trojan Horse, virus.
-
- WRT
- With Respect To
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 58]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- WWW
- See: World Wide Web
-
- WYSIWYG
- What You See is What You Get
-
- X
- X is the name for TCP/IP based network-oriented window systems.
- Network window systems allow a program to use a display on a
- different computer. The most widely-implemented window system is
- X11 - a component of MIT's Project Athena.
-
- X.25
- A data communications interface specification developed to
- describe how data passes into and out of public data
- communications networks. The CCITT and ISO approved protocol
- suite defines protocol layers 1 through 3.
-
- X.400
- The CCITT and ISO standard for electronic mail. It is widely used
- in Europe and Canada.
-
- X.500
- The CCITT and ISO standard for electronic directory services. See
- also: white pages, Knowbot, whois.
-
- XDR
- See: eXternal Data Representation
-
- Xerox Network System (XNS)
- A protocol suite developed by Xerox Corporation to run on LAN and
- WAN networks, where the LANs are typically Ethernet.
- Implementations exist for both Xerox's workstations and 4.3BSD,
- and 4.3BSD-derived, systems. XNS denotes not only the protocol
- stack, but also an architecture of standard programming
- interfaces, conventions, and service functions for authentication,
- directory, filing, email, and remote procedure call. XNS is also
- the name of Xerox's implementation. See also: Ethernet, Berkeley
- Software Distribution, Local Area Network, Wide Area Network.
- [Source: Jeff Hodges]
-
- XNS
- See: Xerox Network System
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 59]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- Yahoo!
-
- Yahoo! is a hierarchical subject-oriented guide for the World Wide
- Web and Internet. Yahoo! lists sites and categorizes them into
- appropriate subject categories. Yahoo! may be reached at
- "http://www.yahoo.com/".
- [Source: Yahoo's "What is Yahoo?"]
-
- Yellow Pages (YP)
- A historic (i.e., no longer in use) service used by UNIX
- administrators to manage databases distributed across a network.
-
- YP
- See: Yellow Pages
-
- zone
- A logical group of network devices.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Malkin Informational [Page 60]
-
- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
-
-
- References
-
- BIG-LAN "BIG-LAN Frequently Asked Questions Memo", BIG-LAN DIGEST
- V4:I8, February 14, 1992.
-
- COMER Comer, Douglas, "Internetworking with TCP/IP: Principles,
- Protocols and Architecture", Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs,
- NJ, 1991.
-
- FYI4 Malkin, G., A. Marine, "FYI on Questions and Answers: Answers
- to Commonly asked "New Internet User" Questions", RFC 1325
- (FYI 4), Xylogics, SRI, May 1992.
-
- HACKER "THIS IS THE JARGON FILE", Version 2.9.8, January 1992.
-
- HPCC "Grand Challenges 1993: High Performance Computing and
- Communications", Committee on Physical, Mathmatical and
- Engineering Sciences of the Federal Coordinating Council for
- Science, Engineering and Technology.
-
- MALAMUD Malamud, Carl, "Analyzing Sun Networks", Van Nostrand
- Reinhold, New York, NY, 1992.
-
- NNSC "NNSC's Hypercard Tour of the Internet".
-
- LAQUEY LaQuey, Tracy, with Jeanne C. Ryer, "The Internet Companion:
- A Beginner's Guide to Global Networking", Addison-Wesley,
- Reading, MA, 1992.
-
- NWNET Kochmer, Jonathan, and NorthWestNet, "The Internet Passport:
- NorthWestNets Guide to Our World Online", NorthWestNet,
- Bellevue, WA, 1992.
-
- RFC1208 Jacobsen, O., D. Lynch, "A Glossary of Networking Terms", RFC
- 1208, Interop, Inc., March 1991.
-
- STD1 Postel, J., "INTERNET OFFICIAL PROTOCOL STANDARDS", RFC 1920
- (STD 1), March 1996.
-
- STD2 Reynolds, J., J. Postel, "ASSIGNED NUMBERS", RFC 1700 (STD
- 2), ISI, October 1994.
-
- TAN Tanenbaum, Andrew S., "Computer Networks; 2nd ed.", Prentice
- Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ, 1989.
-
- ZEN Kehoe, Brendan P., "Zen and the Art of the Internet",
- February 1992.
-
-
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- Malkin Informational [Page 61]
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- RFC 1983 Glossary August 1996
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- Security Considerations
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- While security is not explicitly discussed in this document, some of
- the glossary's entries are security related. See the entries for
- Access Control List (ACL), authentication, Computer Emergency
- Response Team (CERT), cracker, Data Encryption Key (DEK), Data
- Encryption Standard (DES), encryption, Kerberos, Message Digest (MD-
- 2, MD-4, MD-5), Pretty Good Privacy (PGP), Privacy Enhanced Mail
- (PEM), RSA, Trojan Horse, virus, and worm.
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- Editor's Address
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- Gary Scott Malkin
- Xylogics/Bay Networks
- 53 Third Avenue
- Burlington, MA 01803
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- Phone: (617) 238-6237
- EMail: gmalkin@Xylogics.COM
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- Malkin Informational [Page 62]
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