RACE
- Research on
Advanced Communications in Europe. Project
sponsored by the European Community (EC) for the development
of broadband networking capabilities.
raceway
- Wall-mounted channel
with a removable cover used to support horizontal cabling.
radio frequency
- See RF.
radio frequency
interference
- See RFI.
RAM
- Random-access
memory. Volatile memory that can be read and
written by a microprocessor.
random-access memory
- See RAM.
Rapid Transport
Protocol
- See RTP.
RARE
- Réseaux
Associés pour la Recherche Européenne.
Association of European universities and research centers
designed to promote an advanced telecommunications
infrastructure in the European scientific community. RARE
merged with EARN to form TERENA. See also EARN
and TERENA.
RARP
- Reverse
Address Resolution Protocol. Protocol in the TCP/IP
stack that provides a method for finding IP addresses based
on MAC addresses. Compare with ARP.
rate enforcement
- See traffic
policing.
rate queue
- Value that is
associated with one or more virtual circuits, and that
defines the speed at which an individual virtual circuit
will transmit data to the remote end. Each rate queue
represents a portion of the overall bandwidth available on
an ATM link. The combined bandwidth of all configured rate
queues should not exceed the total bandwidth available.
RBHC
- Regional
Bell Holding Company. One of seven telephone
companies created by the AT&T divestiture in 1984.
RBOC
- Regional
Bell Operating Company. Local or regional telephone
company that owns and operates telephone lines and switches
in one of seven U.S. regions. The RBOCs were created by the
divestiture of AT&T. Also called Bell Operating
Company (BOC).
rcp
- Remote copy
protocol. Protocol that allows users to copy files
to and from a file system residing on a remote host or
server on the network. The rcp protocol uses TCP to ensure
the reliable delivery of data.
rcp server
- Router or other
device that acts as a server for rcp. See also rcp.
read-only memory
- See ROM.
Ready To Send
- See RTS.
reassembly
- The putting back
together of an IP datagram at the destination after it has
been fragmented either at the source or at an intermediate
node. See also fragmentation.
redirect
- Part of the ICMP and
ES-IS protocols that allows a router to tell a host that
using another router would be more effective.
redirector
- Software that
intercepts requests for resources within a computer and
analyzes them for remote access requirements. If remote
access is required to satisfy the request, the redirector
forms an RPC and sends the RPC to lower-layer protocol
software for transmission through the network to the node
that can satisfy the request.
redistribution
- Allowing routing
information discovered through one routing protocol to be
distributed in the update messages of another routing
protocol. Sometimes called route redistribution.
redundancy
- 1.) In
internetworking, the duplication of devices, services, or
connections so that, in the event of a failure, the
redundant devices, services, or connections can perform the
work of those that failed. See also redundant
system.
2.) In telephony, the portion of the total information
contained in a message that can be eliminated without loss
of essential information or meaning.
redundant
system
- Computer, router,
switch, or other computer system that contains two or more
of each of the most important subsystems, such as two disk
drives, two CPUs, or two power supplies. For example, on a
fully redundant LightStream 2020 ATM switch, there are two
NP cards with disks, two switch cards, and two power trays.
A partially redundant LightStream 2020 switch might have two
NPs, one switch card, and one power tray.
Refraction
- The measure of how
much a given material bends light.
Regional Bell
Holding Company
- See RBHC.
Regional Bell
Operating Company
- See RBOC.
registered jack
connector
- See RJ
connector.
relay
- OSI terminology for
a device that connects two or more networks or network
systems. A data link layer (Layer 2) relay is a bridge; a
network layer (Layer 3) relay is a router. See also bridge
and router.
reliability
- Ratio of expected to
received keepalives from a link. If the ratio is high, the
line is reliable. Used as a routing metric.
Reliable SAP Update
Protocol
- See RSUP.
reload
- The event of a Cisco
router rebooting, or the command that causes the router to
reboot.
remote bridge
- Bridge that connects
physically disparate network segments via WAN links.
remote copy protocol
- See rcp.
remote job entry
- See RJE.
remote login
- See rlogin.
Remote Monitoring
- See RMON.
Remote Operations
Service Element
- See ROSE.
remote-procedure
call
- See RPC.
remote shell
protocol
- See rsh.
remote source-route
bridging
- See RSRB.
rendezvous point
- See RP.
repeater
- Device that
regenerates and propagates electrical signals between two
network segments. See also segment.
Request For Comments
- See RFC.
request/response
unit
- See RU.
Research on Advanced
Communications in Europe
- See RACE.
Réseaux Associés
pour la Recherche Européenne
- See RARE.
reserved
- Set to zero.
Reverse Address
Resolution Protocol
- See RARP.
Reverse Path
Multicasting
- See RPM.
RF
- Radio
frequency. Generic term referring to frequencies
that correspond to radio transmissions. Cable TV and
broadband networks use RF technology.
RFC
- Request For
Comments. Document series used as the primary means
for communicating information about the Internet. Some RFCs
are designated by the IAB as Internet standards. Most RFCs
document protocol specifications such as Telnet and FTP, but
some are humorous or historical. RFCs are available online
from numerous sources.
RFI
- Radio
frequency interference. Radio frequencies that
create noise that interferes with information being
transmitted across unshielded copper cabling.
RIF
- Routing
Information Field. Field in the IEEE 802.5 header
that is used by a source-route bridge to determine through
which Token Ring network segments a packet must transit. A
RIF is made up of ring and bridge numbers as well as other
information.
RII
- Routing
Information Identifier. Bit used by SRT bridges to
distinguish between frames that should be transparently
bridged and frames that should be passed to the SRB module
for handling.
ring
- Connection of two or
more stations in a logically circular topology. Information
is passed sequentially between active stations. Token Ring,
FDDI, and CDDI are based on this topology.
ring group
- Collection of Token
Ring interfaces on one or more Cisco routers that is part of
a one-bridge Token Ring network.
ring latency
- Time required for a
signal to propagate once around a ring in a Token Ring or
IEEE 802.5 network.
ring
monitor
- Centralized
management tool for Token Ring networks based on the IEEE
802.5 specification. See also active
monitor and standby
monitor.
ring
topology
- Network topology
that consists of a series of repeaters connected to one
another by unidirectional transmission links to form a
single closed loop. Each station on the network connects to
the network at a repeater. While logically a ring, ring
topologies are most often organized in a closed-loop star.
Compare with bus
topology, star
topology, and tree
topology.
RIP
- Routing
Information Protocol. IGP supplied with UNIX BSD
systems. The most common IGP in the Internet. RIP uses hop
count as a routing metric. See also Enhanced
IGRP, hop
count, IGP,
IGRP,
and OSPF.
RJ
connector
- Registered
jack connector. Standard connectors originally used
to connect telephone lines. RJ connectors are now used for
telephone connections and for 10BASE-T and other types of
network connections. RJ-11, RJ-12, and RJ-45 are popular
types of RJ connectors.
RJE
- Remote job
entry. Application that is batch-oriented, as
opposed to interactive. In RJE environments, jobs are
submitted to a computing facility, and output is received
later.
rlogin
- Remote login.
Terminal emulation program, similar to Telnet, offered in
most UNIX implementations.
RMON
- Remote
Monitoring. MIB agent specification described in
RFC 1271 that defines functions for the remote monitoring of
networked devices. The RMON specification provides numerous
monitoring, problem detection, and reporting capabilities.
ROM
- Read-only
memory. Nonvolatile memory that can be read, but
not written, by the microprocessor.
root
account
- 1.) Privileged
account on UNIX systems used exclusively by network or
system administrators.
2.) One of the four default user accounts that are created
in the factory on each LightStream 2020 ATM switch. The root
account is for use by the system or network administrator
only. Its default interface is the bash shell. See also bash.
root bridge
- Exchanges topology
information with designated bridges in a spanning-tree
implementation in order to notify all other bridges in the
network when topology changes are required. This prevents
loops and provides a measure of defense against link
failure.
ROSE
- Remote
Operations Service Element. OSI RPC mechanism used
by various OSI network application protocols.
round-trip time
- See RTT.
route
- Path through an
internetwork.
routed protocol
- Protocol that can be
routed by a router. A router must be able to interpret the
logical internetwork as specified by that routed protocol.
Examples of routed protocols include AppleTalk, DECnet, and
IP.
route extension
- In SNA, a path from
the destination subarea node through peripheral equipment to
a NAU.
route map
- Method of
controlling the redistribution of routes between routing
domains.
Route Processor
- See RP.
route summarization
- Consolidation of
advertised addresses in OSPF and IS-IS. In OSPF, this causes
a single summary route to be advertised to other areas by an
area border router.
Route/Switch
Processor
- See RSP.
router
- Network layer device
that uses one or more metrics to determine the optimal path
along which network traffic should be forwarded. Routers
forward packets from one network to another based on network
layer information. Occasionally called a gateway
(although this definition of gateway is becoming
increasingly outdated). Compare with gateway.
See also relay.
router
IGRP
- Command that selects
IGRP as a routing protocol.
router
rip
- Command that selects
RIP as the routing protocol.
route redistribution
- See redistribution.
routing
- Process of finding a
path to a destination host. Routing is very complex in large
networks because of the many potential intermediate
destinations a packet might traverse before reaching its
destination host.
routing domain
- Group of end systems
and intermediate systems operating under the same set of
administrative rules. Within each routing domain is one or
more areas, each uniquely identified by an area address.
Routing Information
Field
- See RIF.
Routing Information
Identifier
- See RII.
Routing Information
Protocol
- See RIP.
routing
metric
- Method by which a
routing algorithm determines that one route is better than
another. This information is stored in routing tables.
Metrics include bandwidth, communication cost, delay, hop
count, load, MTU, path cost, and reliability. Sometimes
referred to simply as a metric. See also cost.
routing protocol
- Protocol that
accomplishes routing through the implementation of a
specific routing algorithm. Examples of routing protocols
include IGRP, OSPF, and RIP.
routing table
- Table stored in a
router or some other internetworking device that keeps track
of routes to particular network destinations and, in some
cases, metrics associated with those routes.
Routing Table
Maintenance Protocol
- See RTMP.
Routing Table
Protocol
- See RTP.
routing
update
- Message sent from a
router to indicate network reachability and associated cost
information. Routing updates are typically sent at regular
intervals and after a change in network topology. Compare
with flash
update.
RP
- 1.) Route
Processor. Processor module on the Cisco 7000
series routers that contains the CPU, system software, and
most of the memory components that are used in the router.
Sometimes called a supervisory processor.
2.) Rendezvous point. Router specified in
PIM sparse mode implementations to track membership in
multicast groups and to forward messages to known multicast
group addresses. See also PIM
sparse mode.
RPC
- Remote-procedure
call. Technological foundation of client-server
computing. RPCs are procedure calls that are built or
specified by clients and executed on servers, with the
results returned over the network to the clients. See also client-server
computing.
RPM
- Reverse Path
Multicasting. Multicasting technique in which a
multicast datagram is forwarded out of all but the receiving
interface if the receiving interface is one used to forward
unicast datagrams to the source of the multicast datagram.
RS-232
- Popular physical
layer interface. Now known as EIA/TIA-232. See EIA/TIA-232.
RS-422
- Balanced electrical
implementation of EIA/TIA-449 for high-speed data
transmission. Now referred to collectively with RS-423 as
EIA-530. See also EIA-530
and RS-423.
RS-423
- Unbalanced
electrical implementation of EIA/TIA-449 for EIA/TIA-232
compatibility. Now referred to collectively with RS-422 as
EIA-530. See also EIA-530
and RS-422.
RS-449
- Popular physical
layer interface. Now known as EIA/TIA-449. See EIA/TIA-449.
rsh
- Remote shell
protocol. Protocol that allows a user to execute
commands on a remote system without having to log in to the
system. For example, rsh can be used to remotely examine the
status of a number of access servers without connecting to
each communication server, executing the command, and then
disconnecting from the communication server.
RSP
- Route/Switch
Processor. Processor module used in the Cisco 7500
series routers that integrates the functions of the RP and
the SP. See also Cisco
7500, RP
(Route Processor), and SP.
RSRB
- remote source-route
bridging. SRB over WAN links. See also SRB.
RSUP
- Reliable SAP
Update Protocol. Bandwidth-saving protocol
developed by Cisco for propagating services information.
RSUP allows routers to reliably send standard Novell SAP
packets only when the routers detect a change in advertised
services. RSUP can transport network information either in
conjunction with or independently of the Enhanced IGRP
routing function for IPX.
RTMP
- Routing
Table Maintenance Protocol. Apple Computer
proprietary routing protocol. RTMP was derived from RIP. See
also RIP.
RTP
- 1.) Routing
Table Protocol. VINES routing protocol based on
RIP. Distributes network topology information and aids VINES
servers in finding neighboring clients, servers, and
routers. Uses delay as a routing metric. See also SRTP.
2.) Rapid Transport Protocol. Provides
pacing and error recovery for APPN data as it crosses the
APPN network. With RTP, error recovery and flow control are
done end-to-end rather than at every node. RTP prevents
congestion rather than reacts to it.
RTS
- Ready To
Send. EIA/TIA-232 control signal that requests a
data transmission on a communications line.
RTT
- Round-trip
time. Time required for a network communication to
travel from the source to the destination and back. RTT
includes the time required for the destination to process
the message from the source and generate a reply. RTT is
used by some routing algorithms to aid in calculating
optimal routes.
RU
- Request/response
unit. Request and response messages exchanged
between NAUs in an SNA network.
run-time memory
- Memory accessed
while a program runs. On a LightStream 2020 ATM switch, this
memory contains configuration data that is accessed while
the switch operates.
|