switch.
A fibre-channel device that provides full
bandwidth per port and high-speed routing of data by
using link-level addressing.
switch
group.
A switch and the collection of devices
connected to it that are not in other groups.
switch
zoning.
See
zoning
.
synchronous
write
mode.
In remote mirroring, an
option that requires the primary controller to wait for the
acknowledgment of a write operation from the
secondary controller before returning a write I/O request
completion to the host. See also
asynchronous
write
mode
,
remote
mirroring
,
Metro
Mirroring
.
system
name.
Device name assigned by the vendor’s
third-party software.
TCP.
See
Transmission
Control
Protocol
.
TCP/IP.
See
Transmission
Control
Protocol/Internet
Protocol
.
terminate
and
stay
resident
program
(TSR
program).
A program that installs part of itself as an
extension of DOS when it is executed.
topology.
The physical or logical arrangement of
devices on a network. The three fibre-channel
topologies are fabric, arbitrated loop, and point-to-point.
The default topology for the disk array is arbitrated loop.
TL_port.
See
translated
loop
port
.
transceiver.
A device that is used to transmit and
receive data. Transceiver is an abbreviation of
transmitter-receiver.
translated
loop
port
(TL_port).
A port that connects
to a private loop and allows connectivity between the
private loop devices and off loop devices (devices not
connected to that particular TL_port).
Transmission
Control
Protocol
(TCP).
A
communication protocol used in the Internet and in any
network that follows the Internet Engineering Task Force
(IETF) standards for internetwork protocol. TCP
provides a reliable host-to-host protocol between hosts
in packed-switched communication networks and in
interconnected systems of such networks. It uses the
Internet Protocol (IP) as the underlying protocol.
Transmission
Control
Protocol/Internet
Protocol
(TCP/IP).
A set of communication protocols that
provide peer-to-peer connectivity functions for both local
and wide-area networks.
trap.
In the Simple Network Management Protocol
(SNMP), a message sent by a managed node (agent
function) to a management station to report an
exception condition.
trap
recipient.
Receiver of a forwarded Simple
Network Management Protocol (SNMP) trap.
Specifically, a trap receiver is defined by an Internet
Protocol (IP) address and port to which traps are sent.
Presumably, the actual recipient is a software
application running at the IP address and listening to
the port.
TSR
program.
See
terminate
and
stay
resident
program
.
uninterruptible
power
supply.
A source of power
from a battery that is installed between a computer
system and its power source. The uninterruptible power
supply keeps the system running if a commercial power
failure occurs, until an orderly shutdown of the system
can be performed.
user
action
events.
Actions that the user takes, such
as changes in the storage area network (SAN), changed
settings, and so on.
worldwide
port
name
(WWPN).
A unique identifier for
a switch on local and global networks.
worldwide
name
(WWN).
A globally unique 64-bit
identifier assigned to each fibre channel port.
WORM.
See
write-once
read-many
.
write-once
read
many
(WORM).
Any type of storage
medium to which data can be written only a single time,
but can be read from any number of times. After the
data is recorded, it cannot be altered.
WWN.
See
worldwide
name
.
zoning.
(1) In fibre channel environments, the
grouping of multiple ports to form a virtual, private,
storage network. Ports that are members of a zone can
communicate with each other, but are isolated from
ports in other zones. (2) A function that allows
segmentation of nodes by address, name, or physical
port and is provided by fabric switches or hubs.
Glossary
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