IETF

Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) is a large international community of network designers,

 

operators, vendors, and researchers guiding the evolution of Internet architecture. See

 

http://www.ietf.org/overview.html.

IOC

An I/O Controller (IOC) and Target Channel Adapter (TCA) are the parts of an I/O unit. IOCs

 

provide I/O services and TCAs (Target Channel Adapter) provide the transport services. The

 

I/O interface of the TCA is implemented by an I/O Controller.

IP

Internet Protocol. A layer-3 protocol (transport) that uses a “best effort” approach to delivering

 

datagrams across networks.

IPoIB

Internet Protocol over InfiniBand.

IT-API

Interconnect Transport API. A user API for RDMA-capable transports including InfiniBand.

kernel

The kernel is loaded into RAM when the system boots, and contains many critical procedures

 

that are needed for the system to operate. The essential shape and capabilities of the system

 

are determined by the kernel, which can also be referred to as the Operating System (OS).

LID

Local IDentifier.

MAC

The Media Access Control (MAC) address is a unique hardware number. On an Ethernet LAN,

 

it is the same number as your Ethernet address. When a host is connected to the Internet, a

 

correspondence table relates the IP address to your computer's physical (MAC) address on the

 

LAN. The MAC address is used by the Media Access Control sublayer of the Data-Link Layer

 

(DLC) layer of telecommunication protocol. There is a different MAC sublayer for each physical

 

device type. The other sublayer level in the DLC layer is the Logical Link Control sublayer.

MAD

MAnagement Datagram.

MCAST

Multicast message forwarding method that simultaneously transmits messages to multiple

 

ports on a fabric.

MIB

The Management Information Base (MIB) defines the logical and physical characteristics of a

 

system. The “objects” in a MIB determine SNMP agent characteristics.

MPI

Message Passing Interface (MPI) is used in computing clusters to provide high-speed and

 

scalable networks. A widely used set of standards for message passing that emphasize portability

 

and ease-of-use; common in High Performance Computing (HPC) applications.

NIC

Network Interface Card.

NTP

Network Time Protocol (NTP) synchronizes the clocks of networked computer systems. It

 

synchronizes system clocks to Universal Time (UTC) for millisecond and sub-millisecond

 

accuracy.

OSI

Open System Interconnection.

OSPF

Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) is a router protocol preferred in larger autonomous system

 

networks over the Routing Information Protocol (RIP). (RIP is a legacy protocol generally

 

running on older corporate networks.)

Protocol Stack

A layered set of protocols that work together to provide a set of network functions. Each

 

intermediate protocol layer uses the layer below it to provide a service to the layer above.

QoS

Quality of Service.

RARP

Reverse Address Resolution Protocol (RARP) allows a LAN system to query a gateway server

 

for its IP address. The gateway server uses the MAC address of the requestor to locate the IP

 

address in the ARP table and returns the IP address to the requestor. This is typically used to

 

setup new systems.

RDMA

Remote Direct Memory Access (RDMA) allows a network adapter, with the remote application’s

 

permission, to move data into and out of the application’s buffers. It is typically used by Fibre

 

Channel devices for block storage transfers, clustering applications, and InfiniBand.

RED

Random Early Detection (RED) is an algorithm to monitor traffic load at points in the network

 

and stochastically discard packets as network congestion increases.

RIP

Routing Information Protocol.

Service Level

Used for Quality of Service (QoS), a Service Level (SL) specifies the desired service level desired

 

within a subnet. Service Levels are mapped to Virtual Lane.

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HP UX 11i v2 Networking Software manual Ietf, Glossary