Troubleshooting Terminal, Printer and Serial Device Connections - Edition 4 (32022-90030)
134 Glossary
Glossary
therefore allows the choice
between local and end-to-end
acknowledgment.
DCE Data circuit-terminating
equipment. The interfacing
equipment required in order to
interface to data terminal
equipment (DTE) and its
transmission circuit. Synonyms:
data communications equipment,
dataset. A modem is an example
of a DCE.
DDX The national public PSN of
Japan.
DDFA DTC Device File Access
Utilities. A set of HP-UX utilities
which is used by systems and
user written applications to
programmatically access devices
attached to DTC ports.
DDP Direct Distribution Panel;
a distribution panel that serves
as the electrical and physical
interface between a DTC 72MX
mux board (asynchronous
processor board) and up to eight
asynchronous devices for direct
connections. See MDP for modem
connections.
dedicated printer A printer
that can be used only by one host
on the LAN — the one specified in
the Destination Node Name in
that printer’s configuration
screen.
demodulation The process by
which the information-bearing
signal is retrieved from a
modulated carrier wave. The
inverse of modulation.
destination node name In
DTS configuration, it is either 1)
the name of a host that a user can
be connected to by default (if
switching is not enabled for that
user, or if automatic modem
connection is enabled), or 2) the
name of the only host that can
access a dedicated printer.
device class A collection of
devices that have some
user-defined relation. Device
classes are assigned through use
of the NMMGR configuration
program.
device-dependent
characteristic A file
specification for which
modifications are restricted
because of the type of device on
which the file is opened. For
example, data directed to
terminals must have a blocking
factor of one.
device driver A software
module that controls a specific
type of input/output device.
devicefile A file being input to or
output from any peripheral device
except a disc. MPE/iX allows
operations to be performed on the
device itself as if it were a file.