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Interlogix NS3550-2T-8S User Manual User Manual

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IFS NS3552-8P-2S AND NS3550-2T-8S User Manual

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function with a 128-bit hash value. It was designed by Ron Rivest in 1991. MD5 is officially defined in RFC 1321 - The

MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm.

Mirroring

For debugging network problems or monitoring network traffic, the switch system can be configured to mirror frames

from multiple ports to a mirror port. (In this context, mirroring a frame is the same as copying the frame.)

Both incoming (source) and outgoing (destination) frames can be mirrored to the mirror port.

MLD

MLD is an acronym for Multicast Listener Discovery for IPv6. MLD is used by IPv6 routers to discover multicast listeners

on a directly attached link, much as IGMP is used in IPv4. The protocol is embedded in ICMPv6 instead of using a

separate protocol.

MSTP

In 2002, the IEEE introduced an evolution of RSTP: the Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol. The MSTP protocol provides

for multiple spanning tree instances, while ensuring RSTP and STP compatibility. The standard was originally defined by

IEEE 802.1s, but was later incorporated in IEEE 802.1D-2005.

MVR

Multicast VLAN Registration (MVR) is a protocol for Layer 2 (IP)-networks that enables multicast-traffic from a source

VLAN to be shared with subscriber-VLANs.

The main reason for using MVR is to save bandwidth by preventing duplicate multicast streams being sent in the core

network, instead the stream(s) are received on the MVR-VLAN and forwarded to the VLANs where hosts have

requested it/them(Wikipedia).

N

NAS

NAS is an acronym for Network Access Server. The NAS is meant to act as a gateway to guard access to a protected

source. A client connects to the NAS, and the NAS connects to another resource asking whether the client's supplied

credentials are valid. Based on the answer, the NAS then allows or disallows access to the protected resource. An

example of a NAS implementation is IEEE 802.1X.

NetBIOS

NetBIOS is an acronym for Network Basic Input/Output System. It is a program that allows applications on separate

computers to communicate within a Local Area Network (LAN), and it is not supported on a Wide Area Network (WAN).

The NetBIOS giving each computer in the network both a NetBIOS name and an IP address corresponding to a different

host name, provides the session and transport services described in the Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) model.

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