388 - Glossary
RocketLinx MP1204-XT User Guide
: 2000644 Rev. A
D
D
DDMI
DDMI is an acronym for Digital Diagnostics Monitoring Interface. It provides an enhanced digital diagnostic
monitoring interface for optical transceivers which allows real time access to device operating parameters.
DEI
DEI is an acronym for Drop Eligible Indicator. It is a 1-bit field in the VLAN tag.
DES
DES is an acronym for Data Encryption Standard. It provides a complete description of a mathematical
algorithm for encrypting (enciphering) and decrypting (deciphering) binary coded information.
Encrypting data converts it to an unintelligible form called cipher. Decrypting cipher converts the data back
to its original form called plaintext. The algorithm described in this standard specifies both enciphering and
deciphering operations which are based on a binary number called a key.
DHCP
DHCP is an acronym for Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol. It is a protocol used for assigning dynamic IP
addresses to devices on a network.
DHCP used by networked computers (clients) to obtain IP addresses and other parameters such as the default
gateway, subnet mask, and IP addresses of DNS servers from a DHCP server.
The DHCP server ensures that all IP addresses are unique, for example, no IP address is assigned to a second
client while the first client's assignment is valid (its lease has not expired). Therefore, IP address pool
management is done by the server and not by a human network administrator.
Dynamic addressing simplifies network administration because the software keeps track of IP addresses
rather than requiring an administrator to manage the task. This means that a new computer can be added to
a network without the hassle of manually assigning it a unique IP address.
DHCP Relay
DHCP Relay is used to forward and to transfer DHCP messages between the clients and the server when they
are not on the same subnet domain.
The DHCP option 82 enables a DHCP relay agent to insert specific information into a DHCP request packets
when forwarding client DHCP packets to a DHCP server and remove the specific information from a DHCP
reply packets when forwarding server DHCP packets to a DHCP client. The DHCP server can use this
information to implement IP address or other assignment policies. Specifically the option works by setting
two sub-options: Circuit ID (option 1) and Remote ID (option2). The Circuit ID sub-option is supposed to
include information specific to which circuit the request came in on. The Remote ID sub-option was designed
to carry information relating to the remote host end of the circuit.
The definition of Circuit ID in the switch is 4 bytes in length and the format is
vlan_id,
module_id,
port_no
. The
parameter of
vlan_id
is the first two bytes represent the VLAN ID. The parameter of
module_id
is the third
byte for the module ID (in standalone switch it always equal 0, in stackable switch it means switch ID). The
parameter of
port_no
is the fourth byte and it means the port number.
The Remote ID is 6 bytes in length, and the value is equal the DHCP relay agents MAC address.
Summary of Contents for RocketLinx MP1204-XT
Page 28: ...28 Installing the Hardware RocketLinx MP1204 XT User Guide 2000644 Rev A System Reset ...
Page 36: ...36 Web Interface Overview RocketLinx MP1204 XT User Guide 2000644 Rev A Ending a Session ...
Page 180: ...180 Configuration Pages RocketLinx MP1204 XT User Guide 2000644 Rev A Configuration DDMI ...
Page 414: ...414 Glossary RocketLinx MP1204 XT User Guide 2000644 Rev A Y ...