Acknowledgment |
Notification sent from one network device to another to acknowledge
that some event (for example, receipt of a message) has occurred. Sometimes
abbreviated ACK. |
Backbone |
The part of a network that acts as the primary path for traffic that
is most often sourced from, and destined for, other networks. |
Bandwidth |
The difference between the highest and lowest frequencies available
for network signals. The term is also used to describe the rated throughput
capacity of a given network medium or protocol. |
Broadcast |
Data packet that will be sent to all nodes on a network. |
Collision Domain |
In Ethernet, the network area within which frames that have collided
are propagated. |
Congestion |
Traffic in excess of network capacity. |
Cut-through packet switching |
Packet switching approach that streams data through a switch
so that the leading edge of a packet exits the switch at the output port
before the packet finishes entering the input port. |
Fast Ethernet |
Any of a number of 100-Mbps Ethernet specifications. Fast Ethernet
offers a speed increase ten times that of the 10BASE-T Ethernet specification,
while preserving such qualities as frame format, MAC mechanisms, and MTU. |
Full-duplex |
Capability for simultaneous data transmission between a sending station
and a receiving station. |
Microsegmentation |
Division of a network into smaller segments, usually with the intention
of increasing aggregate bandwidth to network devices. |
Propogation delay |
Time required for data to travel over a network, from its source to
its ultimate destination. |
Repeater |
Device that regenerates and propagates electrical signals between two
network segments. |
Segment |
Section of a network that is bounded by bridges, routers, or switches. |
Sliding window |
Refers to the fact that the window size is negotiated dynamically during
the TCP session. |
Topology |
Physical arrangement of network nodes and media within an enterprise
networking structure. |
VLAN (virtual LAN) |
Group of devices on a LAN that are configured (using management software)
so that they can communicate as if they were attached to the same wire,
when in fact they are located on a number of different LAN segments. |