E-Glossary
Secondary Storage Mass storage devices such as hard disks,
Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) is a cryptographic protocol which provide secure communications on the Internet. SSL provides endpoint authentication and communications privacy over the Internet using cryptography. In typical use, only the server is authenticated (i.e. its identity is ensured) while the client remains unauthenticated; mutual authentication requires public key infrastructure (or PKI) deployment to clients. The protocols allow client/server applications to communicate in a way designed to prevent eavesdropping, tampering, and message forgery. Secure Webdisk uses SSL. Also known as: Transport Layer Security (TLS)
Server Message Block (SMB) a network protocol mainly applied to share files, printers, serial ports, and miscellaneous communications between nodes on a network. It also provides an authenticated
Stripe A stripe is a logical space that spans across multiple hard disks with each constituent hard disk contributing equal strips (or chunks) of space to the stripe.
Stripe Set A stripe set is a set of stripes that spans across multiple hard disks. In the figure below, the displayed stripe set has 4 stripes, with strip number 1 comprised of the purple strips 1A, 1B and 1C. Stripe number 2 is comprised of the green strips 2A, 2B and 2C etc.
Stripe Size This is the size of the strips that constitute each stripe. This term is a misnomer – though prevalent – since it should appropriately be called strip size or chunk size.
TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol) A pair of communications protocols that implement the protocol stack on which the Internet and most commercial networks run. TCP is a
UPnP AV (UPnP Audio+Video) Networked Device Interoperability Guidelines, part of the UPnP standards supervised by the DLNA (Digital Living Network Alliance), a forum of vendors and manufacturers who work in the home entertainment industry.
Windows Internet Naming Service (WINS) is Microsoft’s implementation of NetBIOS Name Server (NBNS) on Windows, a name server and service for NetBIOS computer names. Effectively, it is to NetBIOS names what DNS is to domain names - a central store for information, However the stores of information have always been automatically (e.g. at workstation boot) dynamically updated so that when a client needs to contact a computer on the network it can get its update normally DHCP allocated address. Networks normally have more than one WINS server and each WINS server should be in push pull replication,
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