120
G
LOSSARY
bandwidth
The information capacity, measured in bits per second, that a channel
can transmit. The bandwidth of Ethernet is 10 Mbps, the bandwidth of
Fast Ethernet is 100 Mbps, and the bandwidth of Gigabit Ethernet is
1000 Mbps.
baud
The signalling rate of a line, that is, the number of transitions (voltage
or frequency changes) made per second. Also known as
line speed
.
bridge
A device that interconnects two LANs of a different type to form a
single logical network that comprises of two network segments.
Bridges learn which endstations are on which network segment by
examining the source addresses of packets. They then use this
information to forward packets based on their destination address. This
process is known as filtering.
broadcast
A packet sent to all devices on a network.
broadcast storm
Multiple simultaneous broadcasts that typically absorb all the available
network bandwidth and can cause a network to fail. Broadcast storms
can be due to faulty network devices.
CA
See
Certificate Authority
.
cache
Stores copies of frequently accessed objects locally to users and serves
them to users when requested.
Certificate Authority
An organization that issues Digital Certificates.
Classless InterDomain
Routing (CIDR)
Routing between two subnets where the size of the subnet is explicitly
stated using a Variable Length Subnet Mask (VLSM) rather than being
implied by the class of the IP address.
collision
A term used to describe two colliding packets in an Ethernet network.
Collisions are a part of normal Ethernet operation, but a sudden
prolonged increase in the number of collisions can indicate a problem
with a device, particularly if it is not accompanied by a general increase
in traffic.
CoS
Cost of Service. A network prioritization scheme that sorts packets into
queues based on tagging or traffic type.
CSMA/CD
Carrier-sense Multiple Access with Collision Detection. The protocol
defined in Ethernet and IEEE 802.3 standards in which devices transmit
only after finding a data channel clear for a period of time. When two
Summary of Contents for SUPERSTACK 3 3250
Page 8: ......
Page 20: ...20 CHAPTER 1 SWITCH FEATURES OVERVIEW...
Page 43: ...How STP Works 43 Figure 9 STP configurations...
Page 54: ...54 CHAPTER 6 USING TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT...
Page 66: ...66 CHAPTER 8 SETTING UP VIRTUAL LANS...
Page 70: ...70 CHAPTER 9 USING AUTOMATIC IP CONFIGURATION...
Page 98: ...98 CHAPTER 11 IP ROUTING...
Page 102: ...102 APPENDIX A CONFIGURATION RULES...
Page 106: ...106 APPENDIX B NETWORK CONFIGURATION EXAMPLES...
Page 132: ...132 INDEX...