Chapter 2 Vocabulary


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.
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