UCI
Network Glossary
Summary: This is a glossary of network terms
created in August 1998.
- 10Base2
- Shared Ethernet distributed in a "daisy-chain" fashion from
one workstation to the next using BNC tee-connectors and coaxial cable. Also
known as "thinnet". The second-oldest form of commercial Ethernet.
- 10Base5
- Shared Ethernet distributed over a special coax then tapped via transceivers
which attach to the cable. The oldest form of commercial Ethernet.
- 10BaseT
- A variant of Ethernet connecting stations via unshielded twisted pair
cable using RJ-45 connectors, running at 10 Mbps. Deployed in a "star" topology,
so-called because connections originate from a common point, the networking
device, which may either be a hub or repeater (shared Ethernet) or a switch
(switched Ethernet).
- 100BaseT
- A variant of Ethernet connecting stations via Category 5 unshielded twisted
pair cable, also with RJ-45 connectors, but running at 100 Mbps. 10 Mbps.
Deployed in a "star" topology, so-called because connections originate
from a common point, the networking device, which may either be a hub or
repeater (shared Ethernet) or a switch (switched Ethernet).
- Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM)
- A high speed, connection-oriented switching and multiplexing technology
for transmitting information across a wide area or local area network in
units called cells. ATM divides information up into fixed-length cells capable
of transmitting several different types of traffic simultaneously. It is
asynchronous in that information streams can be sent independently, without
a common clock. ATM can be described in three planes: The user plane coordinates
the interface between protocols and ATM; The management place coordinates
the layers of the ATM stack; and the control plan coordinates signaling,
setting up and tearing down virtual circuits.
- ATM
- See Asynchronous Transfer Mode.
- bps
- Bits per second. To convert to bytes per second, divide by 8.
- Bytes per second
- Bytes per second. To convert to bits per second, multiply by eight.
- Backbone
- The generic term for LAN or WAN connectivity between subnetworks across
the enterprise. Generally a conduit for traffic between multiple networks
which must operate at an order of magnitude greater speed and capacity than
the networks it connects. Backbones are generally bordered by either switches
which consult routers or by routers.
- Bandwidth
- This is the range of signal frequencies that can be carried on a communications
channel. While this indicates the channels information carrying capacity,
it is more commonly expressed in bits per second (bps), or mega (million)
bits per second (Mbps). When one says bandwidth increases, one means that
network capacity and perhaps speed has gone up.
- Cable Plant
- The physical infrastructure (wire, connectors, cables, etc) used to carry
data communications signals between data communications equipment.
- CAT5
- See Category 5.
- Category 5
- A standards-based cable consisting of twisted-pair wire, with a specific
number of twists per foot to reduce electrical crosstalk and provide a specific
characteristic impedance (capacitive and inductive reactance) per each foot
of cable. Used as an industry standard for modern cable plant, and required
for Fast Ethernet. Desirable for 10BaseT as well.
- Desktop
- Generally considered to mean the confluence of a work location, a desk
area and a computing device, distinct from a lab, which may have many computing
devices. Intended to refer to one computing device, PC or workstation, which
uses one network connection.
- DNS
- Domain Name System, or by extension, Domain Name Services.
- Ethernet
- Also known as CSMA/CD, it is a networking technology which relies upon
collision detection to back off from simultaneous transmission. Operating
at 10 Mbps, 100 Mbps (Fast Ethernet) and 1000 Mbps (Gigabit Ethernet), it
is the single most commonly deployed networking technology in the LAN, and
the primary one used in UCInet LANs. Ethernet is a layer-2 technology.
- Ethernet Switch
- A networking device which provides switched Ethernet. (see Switched Ethernet).
- FDDI
- A network based on a backbone of dual counter-rotating 100 Mbps fiber
optic rings. One of the rings is normally designated as the primary, the
other as the secondary. This even holds true if one of the point-to-point
fiber optic segments becomes disabled. The counter-rotating rings are connected
to single-fiber slave rings through concentrators. Bypassing inactive stations
is accomplished with fiber optic switches. FDDI allows higher utilization
than Ethernet. One of several technologies used in the UCInet backbone.
- FTP
- See File Transfer Protocol.
- File Transfer Protocol
- The Internet (TCP/IP) protocol and program are used to transfer files
between hosts.
- Gbps (Giga bps)
- A billion bits per second.
- Hub
- The center of a star topology network or cabling system. The term Ethernet
hub typically refers to a shared-media hub. Sometimes referred to as a repeater.
Supports shared Ethernet in a "star" topology over Category 5 twisted-pair
wire terminated by RJ-45 data jacks.
- IP
- See Internet Protocol.
- ISP
- Internet Service Provider.
- Internet
- The Internet; successor to DARPA-NET. Worldwide internetwork based on
the TCP/IP protocol.
- Internet Protocol (IP)
- Part of the TCP/IP protocol suite. The layer three protocol used in a
set of protocols which support the Internet and many private networks. IP
provides a connectionless datagram delivery service for transport-layer protocols
such as TCP and UDP.
- Kbps - (Kilo bps)
- A thousand bits per second.
- LAN
- See Local Area Network.
- Local Area Network - (LAN)
- A network, typically Token Ring or ATM, which connects together multiple
computers, printers and other network devices in a departmental or workgroup
setting. It may be connected to other LANs via a backbone, typically through
a router or routing device, or connected to a through a router to a WAN connection
to other networks, such as the Internet.
- Mbps - (Mega bps)
- A million bits per second.
- MAC Address
- The hardware address of a device connected to a network. In Ethernet,
the Ethernet address.
- Micro segmentation
- The technique of splitting up shared network segments by deploying switching
to reduce the size of the collision domain, reduce congestion and improve
throughput.
- MTA
- Mail Transport Agent. Unlike an MTC, the MTA actually handles sending
and receiving the email to and from the system it is based upon. Most MTAs
support aliasing and forwarding, as well as either the POP or IMAP protocols
for clients which do not have standard MTA support upon their computer. MTAs
which support POP and/or IMAP are referred to as mailhosts, and often support
other functions. At UCI, MTAs are used to accept mail from the network and
the outside world, then forward the mail to specific places. Mail address
to user-id@uci.edu goes through campus MTAs for translation to delivery points,
and actual delivery.
- MTC
- Mail Transport Client. Provides a user-interface for the management of
email received, or the creation of it.
- Multicast
- A form of broadcast where copies of a packet are delivered only to a subset
of all possible destinations.
- Multicasting
- Directing a message or a packet to some subset of all stations on a network
by the use of a special destination address.
- Network Segment
- A portion of a network set apart from other network sections by a bridge,
router or switch. Each network segment supports a single medium access protocol
and a pre-determined bandwidth. The more stations are on a network segment
the more divided this bandwidth is. Crowded network segments lead to a condition
known as congestion, where performance declines. An electrically continuous
piece of a bus based LAN. Segments can be joined together using repeaters,
bridges or routers. Segments may also be split apart using the same devices.
The use of switches to break up segments is known as micro segmentation.
See also shared and switched Ethernet.
- PH
- A program used on several campuses, including UCI, as an interface to
the QI database. Used as an electronic phone book.
- PH/QI
- Used, generally interchangeably with PH, as a reference to PH, the UCI
campus electronic phone book.
- QI
- The database UCI uses with ph, as part of the ph/qi phone book.
- QoS
- See Quality of Service.
- Quality of Service
- This is a networking term which may be used in one of two ways. In the
first way, it represents a quality of networking. In the second, referred
to usually as "QoS", it represents a guarantee or commitment to
not only a particular quality of network service but also a particular rate
or minimum rate of data delivery, as well as maximum times between packets
of data. Used where applications are sensitive to delays, such as video conferencing.
Initially a feature of ATM, it is now being incorporated into the TCP/IP
protocol and will eventually be available as a service on non-ATM networks.
A statement that QoS is is provided is distinct from one which says QoS guarantees
are provided. UCInet provides a good quality of service, but not QoS guarantees
as part of Basic Network Services.
- ROUTING
- The function of determining the route a packet should take from a subnet
to get to another subnet. A component function of all internetworks, or internets.
The process of delivering a message across a network or networks by the most
appropriate path.
- Route
- The patch that network traffic takes from its source to its destination.
- Router
- A system responsible for making decisions about which of several paths
network traffic will take, and for keeping track of routing information which
is being passed along a network be one of several different possible protocols.
To do this a router uses a routing protocol to gain information about the
network and uses algorithms to choose the best router based on several criteria
known as route metrics. In OSI terminology, a router is a Network Layer intermediate
system. See also IP router.
- Shared Ethernet
- A network segment which has multiple nodes connected, and where available
bandwidth is divided among users in a dividing effect. May be deployed using
10Base5, 10Base2 or 10BaseT (the latter being a hub). The most widely deployed
technology in UCInet.
- Simple Network Management Protocol
- Both a way of obtaining and storing information about network devices.
A protocol designed to manage networking devices. SNMP capable devices keep
statistics on their operation, if instructed to do so, which may be remotely
fetched and analyzed by central management stations.
- SNMP
- See Simple Network Management Protocol.
- Star
- A network topology where each node is connected to a central hub.
- Subnet
- A portion of a network, which may be physically independent, that shares
a network address with other portions of the network and is distinguished
by a subnet number. Subnets are created and supported by the use of routing.
- Subnet Address
- The subnet portion of an IP address.
- Switch
- A device which logically connects to network stations through a network
fabric. See also Switched Ethernet.
- Switched Ethernet
- An Ethernet technology deployed from a central box over Category 5 twisted-pair
wire or fiber optic, and which allows the full utilization of bandwidth for
each network conversation by switching connections point-to-point between
stations talking to each other, providing in effect a dedicated connection.
Considered to be an order of magnitude faster than its shared counterpart.
- Thicknet
- See 10Base5.
- Thinnet
- See 10Base2.
- TCP
- See Transmission Control Protocol.
- TCP/IP
- Transport Control Protocol / Internet Protocol. The protocol of the Internet
and most internets and many intranets.
- Transmission Control Protocol
- A layer-four protocol in the set of protocols which support the Internet
and many private networks. TCP is the TCP portion of TCP/IP, and provides
a guaranteed transport service.
- UCInetId
- (Also UCInet-id or Ucinet-Id) Unique string of characters representing
an entry in the campus electronic phone book and in the campus authentication
database. When coupled with the string '@uci.edu', it becomes a campus email
address. UCInet has services (ph/qi, Kerberos authentication, MTAs, etc.)
which consult these databases in order to authenticate users, forward or
deliver email, and assist users in finding other users on the network, by
phone or location.
- VLAN
- See Virtual Local Area Network.
- Virtual Local Area Network
- Individual workstations, rather than being directly connected to a shared
media, are instead connected to an intelligent device such as a switch which
has the capability through software to define LAN membership. This permits
a systems administrator to resegment the LAN without changing the physical
arrangement. It also allows, with some switching technologies, the ability
to support multiple subnets on a single switch where a series of router interfaces
were previously required.
- WAN
- See Wide Area Network.
- Wide Area Network
- A network which covers a larger geographical area than a LAN or a MAN
and where telecommunications links are implemented, normally leased from
the appropriate Private Telephone Operator(s). Examples of WANs include packet
switched networks, public data networks and Value Added Networks (VANs).
- WAN Connection
- A network connection, usually through a router or an ATM switch, which
connects two geographically distanced networks together.
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