Motorola SBG1000 User Manual page 151

Wireless cable modem gateway
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Overview Installation Troubleshooting Contact
symbol rate
Also known as baud rate, is a measure of the number of times per second a signal in a
communications channel varies, or makes a transition between states (states being frequencies,
voltage levels or phase angles). Usually measured in symbols per second (sps).
SYSLOG
A de-facto UNIX standard for logging system events.
T
TBCP
Tagged Binary Communication Protocol
TCP
Transmission Control Protocol on OSI transport layer four, provides reliable transport over the network
for data transmitted using IP (network layer three). It is an end-to-end protocol defining rules and
procedures for data exchange between hosts on top of connectionless IP. TCP uses a timer to track
outstanding packets, checks error in incoming packets, and retransmits packets if requested.
TCP/IP
The Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol suite provides standards and rules for data
communication between networks on the Internet. It is the worldwide internetworking standard and the
basic communications protocol of the Internet.
TFTP
Trivial File Transfer Protocol is a very simple protocol used to transfer files.
transparent
A method to enable all hosts on the wired Ethernet LAN, IEEE 802.11b wireless LAN, HPNA LAN, and
bridging
USB connection to communicate as if they were all connected to the same physical network.
transport layer
Layer of the OSI concerned with protocols for error recognition and recovery. This layer also regulates
information flow.
trunk
Electronic path over which date is transmitted.
TTL
The time to live is the number of routers (or hops) a packet can traverse before being discarded. When
a router processes an packet, it decreases the TTL by 1. When the TTL reaches zero, the packet is
discarded.
tunnel
To place packets inside other packets to send over a network. The protocol of the enclosing packet is
understood by each endpoint, or tunnel interface, where the packet enters and exits the network.
VPNs rely on tunneling to create a secure network.
Tunneling requires the following protocol types:
A carrier protocol, such as TCP, used by the network that the data travels over
An encapsulating protocol, such as IPSec, L2F, L2TP, or PPTP, that is wrapped around the original
data
A passenger protocol, such as IP, for the original data
two-way
A cable system that can transmit signals in both directions to and from the headend and the
subscriber.
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SBG1000 Wireless Cable Modem Gateway User Guide

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