Dell POWEREDGE 1950 Hardware Owner's Manual page 149

Dell computer hardware user manual
Hide thumbs Also See for POWEREDGE 1950:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

expansion card — An add-in card, such as a NIC or SCSI
adapter, that plugs into an expansion-card connector on the
system board. An expansion card adds some specialized
function to the system by providing an interface between the
expansion bus and a peripheral.
expansion-card connector — A connector on the system
board or riser board for plugging in an expansion card.
F — Fahrenheit.
FAT — File allocation table. The file system structure used
by MS-DOS to organize and keep track of file storage. The
®
®
Microsoft
Windows
operating systems can optionally use
a FAT file system structure.
FBD — Fully buffered DIMM.
flash memory — A type of EEPROM chip that can be
reprogrammed from a utility on diskette while still installed
in a system; most EEPROM chips can only be rewritten
with special programming equipment.
format — To prepare a hard drive or diskette for storing
files. An unconditional format deletes all data stored on the
disk.
FSB — Front-side bus. The FSB is the data path and
physical interface between the processor and the main
memory (RAM).
ft — Feet.
FTP — File transfer protocol.
g — Gram(s).
G — Gravities.
Gb — Gigabit(s); 1024 megabits or 1,073,741,824 bits.
GB — Gigabyte(s); 1024 megabytes or
1,073,741,824 bytes. However, when referring to hard-drive
capacity, the term is usually rounded to 1,000,000,000
bytes.
graphics mode — A video mode that can be defined as x
horizontal by y vertical pixels by z colors.
group — As it relates to DMI, a group is a data structure
that defines common information, or attributes, about a
manageable component.
guarding — A type of data redundancy in which a set of
physical drives stores data and an additional drive stores
parity data. See also mirroring, striping, and RAID.
h — Hexadecimal. A base-16 numbering system, often used
in programming to identify addresses in the system's RAM
and I/O memory addresses for devices. In text, hexadecimal
numbers are often followed by h.
headless system — A system or device that functions
without having a keyboard, mouse, or monitor attached.
Normally, headless systems are managed over a network
using an Internet browser.
host adapter — A host adapter implements communication
between the system's bus and the controller for a peripheral
device. (Hard-drive controller subsystems include
integrated host adapter circuitry.) To add a SCSI expansion
bus to your system, you must install or connect the
appropriate host adapter.
hot plug — Describes the feature of the system that enables
you to swap a component of the system while the system is
running.
Hz — Hertz.
I/O — Input/output. A keyboard is an input device, and a
monitor is an output device. In general, I/O activity can be
differentiated from computational activity.
ID — Identification.
IDE — Integrated drive electronics. A standard interface
between the system board and storage devices.
integrated mirroring — Provides simultaneous physical
mirroring of two drives. Integrated mirroring functionality
is provided by the system's hardware. See also mirroring.
internal processor cache — An instruction and data cache
built into the processor.
IP — Internet Protocol.
IPX — Internet package exchange.
IRQ — Interrupt request. A signal that data is about to be
sent to or received by a peripheral device travels by an IRQ
line to the processor. Each peripheral connection must be
assigned an IRQ number. Two devices can share the same
IRQ assignment, but you cannot operate both devices
simultaneously.
149
Glossary

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents