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Interphase Tech RAS Communications Controller 5536 User Manual

Page 235

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Glossary

5536 PRI RAS Communications Controller Users Guide

215

SPID (Service Profile IDentifier)

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An alphanumeric string that

uniquely identifies the service capabilities of an ISDN terminal. This
is an identifier that points to a particular location in the Telco's central
office switch memory where relevant details about the device are
stored. Each BRI connection can have up to two SPIDs, one for each
B channel.

SS7 (signalling System 7)

‹

This is a common channel signalling

system used to establish ISDN call functions.

SVC (Switched Virtual Circuit)

‹

Used in packet data networking

technology. Temporary virtual circuit between two users.

Switch Type

‹

The type of equipment that the telephone company

uses to provide you with ISDN service.

Synchronous Data Link Control (SDLC)

‹

A discipline conforming

to subsets of the Advanced Data Communications Control Procedures
(ADCCP) of the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) and
High-level Data Link Control (HDLC) of the International Organiza-
tion for Standardization.

Used for managing synchronous code-transparent, serial-by-bit infor-
mation transfer over a link connection. Transmission exchanges may
be duplex or half-duplex over switched or nonswitched links. The con-
figuration of the link connection may be point-to-point, multi-point, or
loop.

Contrast with binary synchronous communication.

Synchronous transmission

‹

A data transmission scheme where the

interval between transmitted characters is fixed so that start and stop
bits are not required. In contrast with asynchronous transmissions, syn-
chronous transmissions are guaranteed a specific percentage of band-
width on the network medium.

TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol)

‹

Proto-

col for internetwork routing and reliable message delivery. TCP/IP
functions at the 3rd and 4th layers of the Open Systems Interconnec-
tion model.

IP is the low level protocol for the TCP/IP protocol set. IP provides
packet delivery services between nodes. On the same level as IP are
ARP and RARP.

TCP is a reliable stream-delivery, virtual circuit connection-oriented
protocol that runs on top of IP. Telnet, FTP, and login use TCP connec-
tions.