Multitech ProxyServer MTPSR1-202ST User Manual page 134

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O
Object-Oriented: A method for structuring programs as hierarchically organized classes describing the data and operations
of objects that may interact with other objects.
Office Channel Unit - Data Port (OCU-DP): The CO channel bank used as the interface between the customer's DSU and
the channel bank.
Off-hook: The condition of a device which has accessed a phone line (with or without using the line). In modem use, this is
equivalent to a telephone handset being picked up. Dialing and transmission are allowed, but incoming calls are not
answered. Contrast "on-hook".
Off Premise Extension (OPX): An extension or phone that terminates in a location other than that of the PBX. Commonly
used to provide a corporate member with an extension of the PBX at home.
Ones Density: the measure of the number of logical 1s on a T1 line compared to a given total number of bits on that line;
used for timing information in data recovery in AMI and B8ZS.
On-Hook: The condition of a device which has not accessed a phone line. In modem use, this is equivalent to a telephone
handset that has not been picked up. In other words, it can receive an incoming call. Contrast "off-hook".
Open Shortest Path First (OSPF): A hierarchical Interior Gateway Protocol (IGP) routing algorithm for IP that is a
proposed standard for Internet. OSPF incorporates least-cost routing, equal-cost routing, and load balancing.
Outage: The measure of the time during which a circuit is not available for use due to service interrupt. Outage is the
complement of circuit "availability" (100% minus % available = % outage).
Out-of-band: Signaling that is separated from the channel carrying the information (i.e., the voice/data/video signal is
separate from the carrier signal). Dialing and various other "supervisory" signals are included in the signaling element.
Contrast "In-band" signaling.
Out of Frame (OOF): A T1 alarm condition that is logged on the loss of 2, 3 or 4 of 5 consecutive FT framing bits.
P
Packet: 1. In data communication, a sequence of binary digits, including data and control signals, that is transmitted and
switched as a composite whole. The data, control signals and, possibly, error control information are arranged in a specific
format. 2. Synonymous with data frame. 3. In TCP/IP, the unit of data passed across the interface between the Internet
layer and the link layer. A packet includes an IP header and data. A packet can be a complete IP datagram or a fragment of
an IP diagram. 4. In X.25, a data transmission information unit. A group of data and control characters, transferred as a unit,
determined by the process of transmission. Commonly used data field lengths in packets are 128 or 256 bytes. 5. The field
structure and format defined in the CCITT X.25 recommendation.
Packet Assembler/Dissembler (PAD): Used by devices to communicate over X.25 networks by building or stripping X.25
information on or from a packet.
Packet Data: The information format ("packetized") used for packet-mode calls.
Packet Mode: Refers to the switching of chunks of information for different users using statistical multiplexing to send them
over the same transmission facility.
Parity bit: An extra bit attached to each byte of synchronous data used to detect errors in transmission.
Password Authentication Protocol (PAP): PAP (and CHAP) are widely-used authentication methods for communicating
between routers, both for reaching the Internet and for securing temporary WAN connections such as dial-backup lines.
CHAP uses a three-way handshake process that, in concept, resembles a dial-back routine and uses encrypted passwords.
With PAP, one router connects to the other and sends a plain text login and password.
Permanent Virtual Circuit (PVC): A connection between two endpoints dedicated to a single user. IN ISDN, PVCs are
established by network administration and are held for as long as the user subscribes to the service.
Physical Unit (PU): The component that manages and monitors the resources (such as attached links and adjacent link
stations) associated with a node, as requested by an SSCP via an SSCP-PU session. An SSCP activates a session with the
physical unit in order to indirectly manage, through the PU, resources of the node such as attached links. This term applies
to type 2.0, type 4, and type 5 nodes only.
Point of Presence (POP): The central office's end points of the long distance carriers.
Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP): A protocol that lets a PC user access TCP/IP (Internet member) using an ISDN terminal
adapter or a high-speed modem over a standard telephone line.
Port: A location for input or output data exchange. Computers, muxes, etc. have ports for various purposes.
Primary Rate Interface (PRI): Used on ISDN. In North America, and Japan, PRI is one 64 Kbps D channel and 23 B
channels. Elsewhere, it is one D channel and 30 B channels.
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