Glossary

 

Local Area Network (LAN)

 

 

Local Area Network

A short distance data communications network (typically within a building or campus)

(LAN)

used to link together computers and peripheral devices under some form of standard

 

control.

Line Build Out (LBO)

T1s require the last span to lose 15 - 22.5 dB, a selectable output attenuation is generally

 

required of DTE equipment.

Line Coding Violation

This parameter is a count of both BPVs and EXZs occurring over the accumulation period.

(LCV)

An EXZ increments the LCV by one regardless of the length of the zero string.

Line Errored Seconds

A Line Errored Second is a second in which one or more CVs occurred OR one or more

(LES)

LOS defects.

Local Link Control

A protocol developed by the IEEE 802.2 committee for data-link-level transmission control

(LLC)

 

Local Management

A specification for the use of frame-relay products that define a method of exchanging

Interface

status information between devices such as routers

loop start (LS)

A method of demanding dial tone from the central office by completing an electrical

 

pathway between the outbound and return conductors of a telephone line. Loop start is

 

employed by single-line telephone instruments, for example

loopback

A diagnostic test in which a signal is transmitted across a medium while the sending device

 

waits for its return.

MAC Address

The address for a device as it is identified at the Media Access Control layer in the network

 

architecture

Management

A data base of objects, with attributes and values, representing the manageable components

Information Base (MIB)

of a network device. Used in SNMP. There are industry standardized MIBs and proprietary

 

MIBs

mapping

In network operations, the logical association of one set of values, such as addresses on one

 

network, with quantities or values of another set, such as devices on another network.

Media Access Control

The lower of the two sub-layers of the data link layer defined by the IEEE. The MAC sub-

(MAC)

layer handles access to shared media, such as whether token passing or contention will be

 

used. The MAC contains the standardized data link layer address that is required for every

 

port or device that connects to a LAN. Other devices in the network use these addresses to

 

locate specific ports in the network and to create and update routing tables and data

 

structures. MAC addresses are 6 bytes long and are controlled by the IEEE.

Media Gateway Control

MGCP. A control and signal standard for the conversion of audio signals carried on

Protocol (MGCP)

telephone circuits (PSTN) to data packets carried over the Internet or other packet

 

networks.

Microsoft CHAP

Microsoft Challenge Handshake Authentication Protocol (MS-CHAP) is the Microsoft

 

version of CHAP and is an extension to RFC 1994. Like the standard version of CHAP,

 

MS-CHAP is used for PPP authentication; in this case, authentication occurs between a PC

 

using Microsoft Windows NT or Microsoft Windows 95 and a Cisco router or access server

 

acting as a network access server (NAS).

Adit 3104 - Release 1.6

Glossary-9

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