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Инструкция по эксплуатации HP, модель HP NonStop G-Series

Производитель: HP
Размер: 346.01 kb
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Язык инструкции:enesfrpt
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Фрагмент инструкции


Glossary
Context token. A token that indicates, by its presence or absence, whether or not there
are more reply messages to come. If this token is present in a reply message to a
command, the response is continued in another reply message. To obtain the next
message, the requester reissues the original command with one modification: the
context token is included in the new request message.
When the server sends a reply that does not contain a context token, the requester
knows the series of reply messages is complete. The requester does not need to be
concerned with the contents of the context token; these are for the benefit of the server,
so that it can “find its place” and issue the next reply message. In a reply to a
command, the context token is a kind of response-control token; it is the only
response-control token that can be present in a response as well as in a command. (See
Context and Response-control token.) In event-message distribution, the GETEVENT
command returns the context token along with the next event message; the context
token identifies the following event message, so the backup distributor process can
recover if the primary process goes down. The requester must send the context token
back to the distributor on the next call to GETEVENT.
Continuation. The packaging of a response in multiple reply messages. The server uses
a context token to indicate that the response is continued to another message.
Continuation implies that the response consists of multiple response records; a single
reply message can contain multiple response records, but a single response record
cannot span two reply messages.
Control and inquiry. Those aspects of object management related to the state or
configuration of an object. Such aspects include actions that affect the state or
configuration of an object, inquiries about the object, and commands pertaining to the
session environment (for example, commands that set default values for the session).
Compare with Event management.
Control operation. An action that affects the recording, processing, transmission, or
interpretation of data. In SPI, an operation that modifies the contents of an SPI buffer
not by adding a token, but by performing a housekeeping function—for instance,
clearing the last SPI error number or flushing the buffer from the current position. A
positioning operation is one kind of control operation.
Copied name definition. A copy of a name definition that can be altered on a node other
than the definition node for the name; a copy of the remote definition that can be
locally updated. Such copies are requested through the DNS COPY command,
typically issued when the definition node becomes unavailable but the user still needs
to change the name definition immediately. The alteration affects only the local node’s
view of the name definition. See also Restored name definition.
Creation environment. A set of values established by the DNS SET command, for use in
place of the standard default parameters in subsequent ADD commands. Such ADD
commands then define names with attributes based upon the creation environment.
Current name manager. The DNS name-manager process with which the user is
currently communicating through DNSCOM.
Glossary–4
46958 Tandem Computers Incorporated


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Компьютеры - HP NonStop L-Series (346.01 kb)

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