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V.24
- In data communications, a specification
of the CCITT that defines the list of definitions for interchange circuits
between data terminal equipment (DTE) and data circuit-terminating equipment
(DCE).
-
V.25
- In data communications, a specification
of the CCITT that defines the automatic answering equipment or parallel automatic
calling equipment or both on the General Switched Telephone Network, including
procedures for disabling of echo controlled devices for both manually and
automatically established calls.
-
V.25 bis
- In data communications,
an interim specification of the CCITT that defines the connection of data
terminal equipment to a serial-dial interface of a public switched telephone
network.
-
V.28
- In data communication, a specification
of the CCITT that defines the electrical characteristics for interchange circuits
between data terminal equipment (DTE) and data circuit-terminating equipment
(DCE) at rates below 20 kilobits per second.
-
V.35
- In data communications, a specification
of the CCITT that defines the list of definitions for interchange circuits
between data terminal equipment (DTE) and data circuit-terminating equipment
(DCE) at data rates of 48 kilobits per second.
-
V.36
- In data communication, a specification
of the CCITT that defines the list of definitions for interchange circuits
between data terminal equipment (DTE) and data circuit-terminating equipment
(DCE) at rates of 48, 56, 64, or 72 kilobits per second.
-
VAC
- See variance
at completion.
-
valid
- Pertaining to that which is
allowed, is true, or conforms to some standard.
-
validation
- The checking of data or
code for correctness or for compliance with applicable standards, rules, and
conventions.
-
validation action
- A mechanism for
verifying whether the actual value of a variable at run time corresponds to
the expected value of that variable. See also timing
constraint.
-
validation data
- In Cryptographic
Support, information about a customer used to create and verify the customer's
personal identification number (PIN).
-
validation map
- A set of mapping instructions
that describe additional validation for an EDI document. One of five supported
map types.
-
validation policy
- In a Tivoli environment,
the policy that ensures that all resources in a policy region comply with
the region's established policy. Validation policy prevents Tivoli administrators
from creating or modifying resources that do not conform to the policy of
the policy region in which the resources were created. See also default policy.
-
validator
- A program that checks data
or code for correctness or for compliance with applicable standards, rules,
and conventions.
-
validity assessment
- A data analysis
process that evaluates data columns for valid and invalid values.
-
validity checking
- (1) Verification of
the contents of a field.
- (2) Verification that object names used in
DB2 for i5/OS SQL statements exist on a system.
-
valid printable area (VPA)
- The intersection
of the current logical page or current overlay with the physical page in which
printing is allowed. See also user printable area.
-
value
- (1) The smallest unit of data manipulated
in SQL.
- (2) In DCE X/Open Object Management (XOM), an arbitrary and
complex information item that can be viewed as a characteristic or property
of an object.
- (3) In programming, the alphabetic or numeric contents
of a variable or a storage location.
- (4) The content of a data item.
This can be an integer, a string, or the handle of another data bag.
- (5) An element of a type domain.
- (6) The content of a variable,
parameter, special register, or field.
- (7) A specific data item at
the intersection of a column and row.
-
value chain business model
- A business
model that supports transactions involving multiple enterprises or parties.
Products, goods, services, or information are delivered through the parties
of the value chain from producers to end users. See also demand chain, supply chain.
-
value constraint
- A limit that sets
a restriction on the values that a simple type can represent.
-
value type
- In query management, one
of the arguments passed to the extended interface. The value type specifies
the data type of the value associated with the keyword.
-
variable
- A representation of a changeable
value. See also global variable.
-
variable buffer
- A storage area used
to pass dialog variables between the application program and the user interface
manager (UIM).
-
variable data
- In AFP Utilities, an
element in the record layout whose value is represented in the database file.
See also fixed data.
-
variable length
- The length of a record
or field that can be changed. See also fixed length.
-
variable-length
- Property of a record
or field that can have a varying length.
-
variable-length record
- (1) A record having
a length independent of the length of other records with which it is logically
or physically associated. See also fixed-length record.
- (2) In distributed data management (DDM) and Distributed FileManager
(DFM), a record whose length can be changed after it has been written to a
file. Variable-length records are normally used in reference to count-key-data
(CKD) and extended count key data (ECKD) formats. See also fixed-length record.
-
variable-length string
- See varying-length string.
-
variable-length variable blocked (VLVB)
- Data format of messages transmitted between CICS and IMS.
-
variable-occurrence data item
- In
COBOL, a table element that is repeated a variable number of times. Such an
item must contain an OCCURS DEPENDING ON clause in its data description entry,
or be subordinate to such an item.
-
variable pattern
- In REXX, a parsing
pattern that uses variables to specify where a string of characters is parsed.
The value of the variable can be set by the user and can change while running.
-
variable pool
- In the user interface
manager (UIM), the collection of dialog variables defined for an opened application
program.
-
variable pool interface
- In REXX,
an application program interface that allows programs written in other languages
to access variables being used by or contained in an active REXX program.
-
variable record
- The named element
of a panel group that identifies the content and layout for the storage area
of the dialog variables.
-
variable symbol
- In a REXX exec, a
symbol that is assigned a value by the user or in some cases by the REXX interpreter.
The value of a variable symbol can be tested and changed using control statements.
-
variance at completion (VAC)
- The
difference between the budget at completion less the estimate at completion.
A negative result indicates the task or project is over budget.
-
variant function
- See non-deterministic function.
-
varying-length string
- (1) A character
or graphic string whose length is not fixed, but variable within limits. See
also fixed-length string.
- (2) A character,
graphic, or binary string whose length is not fixed but can range within set
limits.
-
varied off
- Pertaining to a device,
controller, line, network interface, or independent disk pool unavailable
for its normal, intended use.
-
vary off
- To make a device, control
unit, or line unavailable for its normal intended use.
-
vary offline
- To change the status
of a device or library from online to offline. When a device or tape library
is offline, no data can be accessed on the device or tape library. Varying
an optical library offline does not affect the online or offline status of
the drives it contains.
-
varied on
- See available.
-
vary on
- To make an independent disk
pool available for its normal, intended use. All of the primary and secondary
disk pools in a disk pool group will vary on together.
-
vary online
- To change the status
of a device or library from offline to online. Varying online makes available
for access the device or library being varied online.
-
vault
- An encrypted file used to store
sensitive information, such as database passwords. A separate file contains
a key that is used to decrypt the data in the vault file.
-
VC
- See virtual
circuit.
-
VCC
- See virtual
channel connection.
-
V-con
- See V-type constant.
-
VDisk
- See virtual disk.
-
VDS
- See visual
data stream.
-
vector
- (1) In the GDDM function, a directed
line segment, which is a straight line between two points.
- (2) In
SNA, a data structure containing three fields: a length field that specifies
the length of the vector in which it is contained, an identifier or type field,
and a value field. The value field may contain subvectors.
- (3) An
array of one dimension.
- (4) A linearly ordered collection of scalars
of the same type. Each scalar is said to be an element of the vector. See
also array, scalar.
-
vectored I/O
- See scattered read.
-
vector instruction
- An instruction,
such as a load, store, arithmetic, or logical instruction, that operates on
vectors residing in storage or in a vector register in the vector facility.
See also scalar instruction.
-
vector processor
- A processor that
can perform operations on multiple data elements, such as the elements of
an array, simultaneously.
-
vector symbol set (VSS)
- In the GDDM
function, a set of characters each of which is treated as a small picture
and is described by a sequence of lines and arcs. Characters in a vector symbol
set can be drawn to scale, rotated, and positioned precisely. See also image symbol set.
-
vendor
- A person or company that provides
a service or product to another person or company.
-
Vendor Independent Messaging (VIM)
- An application program interface (API) defined by Apple Computer, Inc.; Borland
International, Inc.; Lotus Development Corporation; and Novell, Inc.
-
Venn diagram
- A graphic image consisting
of overlapping circles that represent the logical relationship of two sets
of information.
-
verb
- (1) A reserved word that expresses
an action to be taken by an application programming interface (API), a compiler,
or an object program.
- (2) The text string in a business object that
specifies an operation to be performed on the attributes in a business object.
A business object definition contains a list of supported verbs; the business
object itself contains one of the supported verbs.
- (3) In SNA, the
general name for a transaction program's request for communication services.
- (4) See people assignment criterion.
-
verdict
- The assessment of the performance
of a system under test.
-
verification
- (1) The process of checking
to ensure that the contents of a message are correct.
- (2) The act
of confirming that a user is eligible to use a RACF-defined userid.
-
verification status
- A true or false
condition that indicates whether an authorized resource manager or project
manager has verified the personal information of a resource.
-
Versatile Storage Specialist
- The
Web-based management interface to the Versatile Storage Server.
-
version
- (1) A member of a set of similar
programs or packages and, in DB2 for z/OS, similar DBRMs or LOBs.
- (2) A separately licensed program that usually has significant new code or new
function.
- (3) An object that implements a particular revision of an
element. The versions of an element are organized into a version tree structure.
See also checked-out version.
-
version control
- The coordination
and integration of the history of work submitted by a team. See also team support.
-
versioned object base (VOB)
- A repository
that stores versions of file elements, directory elements, derived objects,
and metadata associated with these objects.
-
version file system
- See root file system.
-
version information
- Unique, identifying
information associated with a project, document, or requirement each time
it is modified. The internally generated revision number, combined with information
about the author, date, time, and reason for modification, constitute version
information. See also revision.
-
version recovery
- The restoration
of a previous version of a database, using an image that was created during
a backup operation. See also crash recovery, roll-forward recovery.
-
version tolerance
- A version of the
consuming software entity that the supplying software entity can tolerate.
-
version tree
- A graphic representation
of a versioned object that shows all branches and the versions on each branch.
-
vertex
- A source or a target for a
transition in a state machine. A vertex can be either a state or a pseudo-state.
See also pseudo-state, state.
-
vertical format information
- In TCP/IP,
information, such as tab markers, that automatically positions lines of text
with respect to other lines of text, according to defined rules. Vertical
format information is usually associated with word processing.
-
Vertical Licensed Internal Code (VLIC)
- Programming that defines logical operations on data. The Vertical Licensed
Internal Code translates the machine interface (MI) instructions.
-
vertically displayed records
- Subfile
records that are grouped so that each record is displayed on one or more lines.
Each record begins a new line.
-
vertical scaling
- Setting up multiple
application servers on one machine, usually by creating cluster members.
-
VFS
- See virtual
file system.
-
VFT
- See virtual
function table.
-
VGR
- See VTAM
Generic Resources.
-
VGR affinity
- For VTAM Generic Resources,
an association, managed by VTAM or IMS, that a VTAM logical unit has with
a specific IMS in a generic resource group.
-
video mixing
- The process of dynamically
inserting or combining multiple video objects into a single object for distribution.
An example would be the mixing of commercials and broadcast programs for satellite
distribution.
-
video object
- The data file containing
a program recorded for playback on a computer or television set.
-
video-on-demand (VOD)
- A service for
providing consumers with movies and other programming almost immediately,
per request.
-
video stream
- The path data follows
when read from the IBM Content Manager VideoCharger Server system to the display
unit.
-
video terminal paging
- A facility
that allows the application programmer to send multiple screens of information
to a display device which may then be viewed by the terminal operator either
in or out of sequence and as many times as desired.
-
view
- (1) A logical table that is based
on data stored in an underlying set of tables. The data returned by a view
is determined by a SELECT statement that is run on the underlying tables.
See also base table, table.
- (2) The form in which an object is presented. A choice in the
action bar that a user selects to look at an object from various perspectives
is an example of a view.
- (3) In Eclipse-based user interfaces, any
pane in the workbench that is outside the editor area and can be stacked (dragged
and dropped) on top of other views. Views provide different ways to look at
or work with the resources in the workbench.
- (4) In the CICSPlex SM
API, a temporary, customized form of a resource table. A view can consist
of some or all of the resource table attributes in any order.
- (5) In the CICSPlex SM ISPF end-user interface, a formatted display of selected
data about CICS resources or CICSPlex SM definitions. The data in a view is
obtained from a query and can be presented in one or more forms. The data
can be limited to a subset of CICSplex resources or definitions by establishing
a context and scope.
- (6) A ClearCase object that provides a work area
for one or more users. For each element in a VOB, a view's configuration specification
selects one version from the element's version tree.
- (7) A window
that displays requirements, the attributes assigned to requirements, and the
relationships between requirements. See also Attribute
Matrix, traceability matrix, traceability tree.
- (8) In the Reusable Asset Specification (RAS),
a projection (subset) of the system models that shows a specific aspect of
the system or addresses one or more of the concerns of the system stakeholders.
- (9) A projection of a model, which is seen from a given perspective
or vantage point and omits entities that are not relevant to this perspective.
- (10) A virtual table composed of column information from one or more
physical tables in the database.
- (11) A window pane, or frame, in a
workspace. It may contain data from an agent in a chart or table, or it may
contain a terminal session or notepad, for example. A view can be split into
two separate, autonomous views.
- (12) In Eclipse-based user interfaces,
a pane that is outside the editor area, which can be used to look at or work
with the resources in the workbench.
-
view command
- A command that is used
to compose a view as a response to a client request.
-
view element
- A view element is a
textual and/or graphical projection of a collection of model elements. See
also model element.
-
viewer
- One or more individuals who
can view but not modify repository information.
-
viewpoint
- See portlet.
-
viewport
- (1) In the GDDM function, a
rectangular area within the picture space that defines where the output of
the current page appears on the work station.
- (2) That portion of
a partition or usable area defined for display of data to the operator. The
viewport has a predefined size and position on the screen and is related to
a presentation space through a specified window. See also presentation space.
- (3) In BMS, that part of a screen that is
allocated to a partition. See also partition.
-
view-private object
- A file or directory
that exists only in a particular view and is not under version control.
-
view projection
- A projection of model
elements onto view elements. A view projection provides a location and a style
for each view element.
-
view synchronous high-availability manager group
- A special class of high availability (HA) group that can be created
and used by components that require a certain virtual synchrony (VS) quality
of service (QoS) for group communication.
-
VIM
- See Vendor
Independent Messaging.
-
violation
- The state of a service
level agreement (SLA) when one or more service level objectives are not met.
SLA violations can be used to trigger a remediation policy for affected customers.
-
violation condition
- A condition that
indicates the actual measured value has not met the specified breach condition.
This condition applies to a total or average type breach value. For example,
if the total breach value was specified as 100, and its associated breach
condition was specified as 'actual greater than supplied,' and the actual
measured value was 110, then a violation is produced.
-
violation event
- an event that is
generated or triggered when a transaction performs outside of acceptable bounds
(performance threshold) or fails completely (transaction status threshold).
See also recovery event.
-
violation status
- In performance monitoring,
the status of an active policy that indicates that a threshold is violated.
In the hourly average view, this means the average performance time of all
transactions that occurred during the hour is outside the threshold. In the
instance view, the performance time of the instance is outside the threshold.
See also interpreted status.
-
VIO storage group
- See virtual input/output storage group.
-
virtual
- Pertaining to not physically
existing as such but made by software to appear to do so.
-
virtual address
- The address of a
location in virtual storage.
-
virtual address space
- (1) In CICS/VSE,
a subdivision of the virtual address area available to the user for the allocation
of private, nonshared partitions.
- (2) In virtual storage systems,
the virtual storage assigned to a job, terminal user, or system task. See
also address space.
-
virtual address translation
- The conversion
of virtual storage addresses to real storage addresses.
-
virtual call
- An X.25 user facility
in which a call setup procedure and a call clearing procedure determine a
period of communications between two DTEs in which the users' data will be
transferred in the network in the packet mode of operation. All the users'
data is delivered from the network in the same order in which it is received
by the network. Synonym for switched virtual call.
-
virtual channel connection (VCC)
- In asynchronous transfer mode (ATM), a connection between two ATM endsystems.
A VCC can be either a permanent virtual connection (PVC) or a switched virtual
connection (SVC) and may traverse several virtual path connections.
-
virtual circuit (VC)
- In a packet-switching
data network, a logical end-to-end transmission channel--as opposed to a physical
connection--that connects X.25 users. Virtual circuits allow physical transmission
facilities to be shared by many users simultaneously. A virtual circuit is
a logical connection established between two DTEs. See also physical circuit.
-
virtual column
- A concatenation of
two or more columns that can be analyzed as if it is an existing column.
-
virtual concurrent copy
- An operation
that uses SnapShot to provide a concurrent copy-like function when the source
volume supports SnapShot, but not concurrent copy. Virtual concurrent copy
is also referred to as CC-compatible SnapShot.
-
virtual controller
- (1) A controller description
that emulates the function of a physical controller for communication with
a remote device. As an example, when a PC is attached to a system, a virtual
controller must be created to allow the PC to communicate with the system.
- (2) A controller description that is used by Advanced Peer-to-Peer
Networking (APPN) and high-performance routing (HPR) support to attach and
manage APPN device descriptions. This type of controller does not represent
a connection to a remote station.
-
virtual device
- A device description
that does not have hardware associated with it. It is used to form a connection
between a user and a physical work station attached to a remote system. A
virtual device can be a virtual display station or a virtual printer.
-
virtual device number
- In z/VM, a
device number used by a guest virtual machine. Real devices can be referred
to by different virtual device numbers by different guest virtual machines.
-
virtual disk (VDisk)
- (1) In CICS/VSE,
a range of up to two gigabytes of contiguous virtual storage addresses that
a program can use as workspace. Although the virtual disk exists in storage,
it appears as a real FBA disk device to the user program. All I/O operations
directed to a virtual disk are intercepted and the data to be written to,
or read from, the disk is moved to or from a data space. Like a data space,
a virtual disk can hold only user data; it does not contain shared areas,
system data or programs. Unlike an address space or a data space, data is
not directly addressable on a virtual disk. To manipulate data on a virtual
disk, the program has to perform I/O operations.
- (2) A device that
host systems attached to the storage area network (SAN) recognize as a Small
Computer System Interface (SCSI) disk.
-
virtual export
- A volume marked as
exported using the DFSMSrmm subcommands.
-
virtual file system (VFS)
- A remote
file system that has been mounted so that it is accessible to the local user.
-
virtual function table (VFT)
- In C++,
an initialized table that facilitates polymorphism by indexing the addresses
for the virtual functions available to a class hierarchy. The compiler creates
at least one virtual function table for each class, unless the class has no
virtual members.
-
virtual host
- A configuration enabling
a single host machine to resemble multiple host machines. Resources associated
with one virtual host cannot share data with resources associated with another
virtual host, even if the virtual hosts share the same physical machine.
-
virtual hosting
- The capability of
a Web server that allows it to appear as more than one host to the Internet.
-
virtual image
- A CD or DVD image that
is stored on system disks. Virtual images are stored in the integrated file
system and can be in either Universal Disk Format (UDF) or ISO 9660 format.
-
virtual input/output storage group (VIO storage
group)
- A type of storage group that allocates data sets to paging
storage, which simulates a direct access storage device (DASD) volume. VIO
storage groups do not contain any actual DASD volumes. See also storage group.
-
virtualization
- (1) In the storage industry,
a concept in which a pool of storage is created that contains several disk
subsystems. Subsystems from various vendors can be used. The pool can be split
into virtual disks (VDisks) that are visible to the host systems that use
them.
- (2) A technique that encapsulates the characteristics of resources
from the way in which other systems interact with those resources.
-
virtualized
- A property of the on-demand
operating environment that makes the best use of technology resources and
minimizes complexity for users. Virtualized networks deliver computing as
needed. See also grid computing.
-
virtualized storage
- Physical storage
that has virtualization techniques applied to it by a virtualization engine.
-
virtual local area network (VLAN)
- A logical association of switch ports based upon a set of rules or criteria,
such as Medium Access Control (MAC) addresses, protocols, network address,
or multicast address. This concept permits the LAN to be segmented again without
requiring physical rearrangement.
-
virtual logical unit number (VLUN)
- A subset of a logical drive.
-
virtual lookaside facility (VLF)
- MVS/ESA facility that manages the data space associated with library lookaside
(LLA).
-
virtual LU
- An LU defined in MERVA
Extended Connectivity for communication between MERVA and MERVA Extended Connectivity.
-
virtual machine (VM)
- (1) An instance
of a data-processing system that appears to be at the exclusive disposal of
a single user, but whose functions are accomplished by sharing the resources
of a physical data-processing system.
- (2) An abstract specification
for a computing device that can be implemented in different ways in software
and hardware.
-
Virtual Machine/System Product (VM/SP)
- An IBM operating system that supplies a virtual machine to each logged-on
user.
-
virtual method
- In object-oriented
programming, a method that exhibits polymorphism.
-
virtual node (vnode)
- (1) The node associated
with a connection network when a route is calculated that goes through that
connection network.
- (2) The structure that contains information about
a file system object in an virtual file system (VFS).
-
virtual optical device
- An optical
device of type 632B that supports virtual optical images. This device can
be created with the Create Device Description (Optical) (CRTDEVOPT) command
by using a resource name (RSRCNAME) of *VRT.
-
virtual optical storage
- Storage on
system disks that appears to the user to be storage on an actual CD or DVD.
-
virtual origin (VO)
- The address of
an element in an array with subscripts that are all zero.
-
virtual partition
- In CICS/VSE, A
division of the dynamic area of virtual storage.
-
virtual party
- In telephony, a party
that does not actually take part in a telephone call. A virtual party is represented
by a special directory number or numbers.
-
virtual path connection (VPC)
- In
asynchronous transfer mode (ATM), a group of virtual channel connections that
are switched together as one unit.
-
virtual printer
- In System i Access,
a printer attached to a host system that can receive output from a personal
computer for printing. A virtual printer allows a user to use a printer attached
to the host system as though the printer were directly attached to a personal
computer.
-
virtual private network (VPN)
- An
extension of a company's intranet over the existing framework of either a
public or private network. A VPN ensures that the data that is sent between
the two endpoints of its connection remains secure.
-
virtual processor
- (1) A setting that
defines the assigned processing capacity represented to the operating system.
Virtual processors represent a processing capacity less than that of a physical
processor. A logical partition in the shared processor pool must have at least
as many virtual processors as its assigned processing capacity.
- (2) The defined processing capacity assigned to an uncapped partition as represented
to the operating system.
-
virtual SCSI client adapter
- A virtual
adapter in one logical partition that communicates with a virtual SCSI server
adapter in another partition. A virtual SCSI client adapter allows a logical
partition to access a storage device being made available by another logical
partition. See also virtual SCSI server adapter.
-
virtual SCSI server adapter
- An adapter
in one logical partition that is available to a virtual SCSI client adapter
in another logical partition. A logical partition to which a storage device
is assigned can map that device to a virtual SCSI server adapter. See also
virtual SCSI client adapter.
-
virtual server
- A server that shares
its resources with other servers to support applications.
-
virtual server template
- A set of
definitions that provides configuration defaults for z/VM virtual servers.
z/VM Center uses virtual server templates to create z/VM virtual servers.
-
Virtual Shared Disk
- See IBM Virtual Shared Disk.
-
virtual storage (VS)
- The storage
space that can be regarded as addressable main storage by the user of a computer
system in which virtual addresses are mapped to real addresses. The size of
virtual storage is limited by the addressing scheme of the computer system
and by the amount of auxiliary storage available, not by the actual number
of main storage locations. See also storage.
-
Virtual Storage Access Method (VSAM)
- An access method for direct or sequential processing of fixed-length and variable-length
records on disk devices. The records in a VSAM data set or file can be organized
in logical sequence by a key field (key sequence), in the physical sequence
in which they are written on the data set or file (entry sequence), or by
relative-record number.
-
virtual storage constraint relief (VSCR)
- The movement of areas of code or control blocks to storage above the
16MB line, or the reduction of code or control blocks below the 16MB line.
These actions increase the storage available for user programs and data that
use 24-bit addressing.
-
Virtual Storage Extended (VSE)
- A
system that consists of a basic operating system (VSE/Advanced Functions),
and any IBM supplied and user-written programs required to meet the data processing
needs of a user. VSE and the hardware that it controls form a complete computing
system. Its current version is called VSE/ESA.
-
Virtual Storage Option (VSO)
- An option
for DEDB areas that maps an area into a data space or a coupling facility
structure when the area is opened. The share level of the database determines
which is used. Any VSO area CI or CF structure that has been loaded into
a data space is subsequently read from the data space or CF structure rather
than from DASD.
-
virtual storage paging
- A technique
used by CICS in a virtual storage environment. The key objective of programming
in this environment is the reduction of page faults. A page fault occurs when
a program refers to instructions or data that do not reside in real storage,
in which case, the page in virtual storage that contains the referenced instructions
or data must be paged into real storage. The more paging required, the lower
the overall system performance.
-
virtual synchrony (VS)
- A property
of group communication that guarantees how messages are delivered when the
view changes, for example, when existing members fail or new members join.
-
Virtual Telecommunications Access Method (VTAM)
- An IBM licensed program that controls communication and the flow
of data in an SNA network.
-
virtual terminal
- A system object,
created and controlled by an application program, that provides a functional
representation or simulation of a physical display station.
-
virtual terminal manager (VTM)
- A
Vertical Licensed Internal Code component that provides an interface to handle
input/output to virtual devices on the system.
-
virtual terminal manager/function manager (VTM/FM)
- The function that provides an application program interface to
terminal handling components residing below the machine interface on the system.
-
virtual user
- Emulation of the processes
performed by an actual user of the system.
-
virtual volume
- (1) An archive file on
a target server that represents a sequential media volume on a source server.
- (2) A tape volume that resides in a tape volume cache of a virtual
tape server (VTS). Whether the volume resides in the tape volume cache as
a virtual volume or on a stacked volume as a logical volume (LVOL) is transparent
to the host.
-
virtual workstation controller
- A
work station controller description that has the characteristics of a locally
attached work station controller but does not exist as hardware.
-
virus
- A program that can change other
programs to include a copy of itself. The other programs are then said to
be infected by the virus. Additionally, the virus can perform other operations
that can take up system resources or destroy data.
-
visibility
- An enumeration whose value
(public, protected, or private) denotes how the model element to which it
refers may be seen outside its enclosing namespace.
-
visibility service
- A type of business
service that monitors and displays the performance, behavior, or metrics of
a business process.
-
visible data partition
- A data partition
whose data is available to SQL statements. See also attached data partition, detached data partition.
-
visible identifier
- An identifier
that is within the scope of the current program or function.
-
vision
- The user's or customer's view
of the product to be developed, specified at the level of key stakeholder
needs and features of the system.
-
vision system
- An intelligent pattern-recognition
system that consists of a camera and lamps mounted on the gripper assemblies,
the vision system controller, and the vision monitor. The vision system scans
the external labels on cartridges to provide positive cartridge identification.
-
visual data stream (VDS)
- In bidirectional
text representation, a stream of data that is organized in the sequence in
which the data is presented on the screen. See also logical data stream.
-
Visual Explain
- A tool that lets database
administrators and application programmers use a graphical interface to display
and analyze detailed information on the access plan of a given SQL or XQuery
statement. The tasks provided by this tool can be accessed from the Control
Center.
-
visualization
- An association between
a Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) diagram and the set of actions that describe
how the diagram should be updated based on the values of metrics or key performance
indicators (KPIs).
-
visual monitoring
- An icon-based method
for monitoring a cluster.
-
visual snippet
- A diagrammatic representation
of a fragment of Java programming language that can be manipulated with the
visual snippet editor.
-
vital product data (VPD)
- Information
that uniquely defines system, hardware, software, and microcode elements of
a processing system.
-
vital record group
- In DFSMSrmm, a
set of data sets with the same name that matches one vital-record specification.
-
vital record processing
- The process
of inventory management that determines which data sets and volumes DFSMSrmm
should retain and whether a volume should be moved. These volumes and data
sets have been assigned a vital record specification. See also storage-location management processing, inventory
management.
-
vital records
- A data set or volume
maintained to meet an externally-imposed retention requirement, such as a
legal requirement. Compare with disaster recovery. See also disaster recovery.
-
vital record specification (VRS)
- In DFSMSrmm, policies defined to manage the retention and movement of data
sets and volumes for disaster recovery and vital records purposes. See also
secondary vital-record specification, primary vital-record specification.
-
vital-record specification-management value
- In DFSMSrmm, a name with 1 - 8 characters that is defined by the installation
and is used to assign management and retention values to tape data sets.
-
VLAN
- See virtual
local area network.
-
VLF
- See virtual
lookaside facility.
-
VLIC
- See Vertical
Licensed Internal Code.
-
VLIC log
- A list of problem analysis
information created by Vertical Licensed Internal Code.
-
VLUN
- See virtual
logical unit number.
-
VLVB
- See variable-length
variable blocked.
-
VM
- See virtual
machine.
-
VM/MVS bridge
- A function of the Communications
Utilities for i5/OS licensed program that provides distribution services between
an i5/OS SNADS network and both a VM Remote Spooling Communications Subsystem
(RSCS) network and a Multiple Virtual Storage/Job Entry Subsystem (MVS/JES)
network.
-
VMS
- See Voice
Message Service.
-
VM/SP
- See Virtual Machine/System Product.
-
vnode
- See virtual node.
-
VO
- See virtual
origin.
-
VOB
- See versioned
object base.
-
VOB database
- The part of a versioned
object base (VOB) storage directory in which metadata and VOB objects are
stored.
-
VOB family
- The set of replicas of
a particular versioned object base (VOB).
-
vocabulary
- A list of words with which
DirectTalk matches input spoken by a caller.
-
VOD
- See video-on-demand.
-
voice application
- A DirectTalk application
that answers or makes calls, plays recorded voice segments to callers, and
responds to the caller's input.
-
voice directory
- A list of voice segments
identified by a group ID. Voice directories can be referenced by prompts and
state tables. See also voice table.
-
voice-grade telephone line
- A telephone
line that is normally used for voice communications. The line requires a modem
for data communications.
-
voice mail
- The capability to record,
play back, distribute, and route voice messages.
-
voice mailbox
- The notional hard disk
space where the incoming messages for a voice mail subscriber are stored.
-
voice message
- In voice mail, a recording
made by a caller for later retrieval by a subscriber. See also greeting.
-
Voice Message Service (VMS)
- An Ericsson
service that transmits information between DirectTalk and certain switches.
-
voice messaging
- The capability to
record, play back, distribute, route, and manage voice recordings of telephone
calls through the use of a processor, without the intervention of agents other
than the callers and the message recipients.
-
voice model
- A file containing parametric
information about the sounds of the language that are to be recognized on
behalf of an application. In WebSphere Voice Server this is a bnf file.
-
Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP)
- Sending telephony voice over Internet Protocol (IP) data connections rather
than existing dedicated voice networks, switching and transmission equipment.
-
voice port library
- A library that
manages a socket connection from the client to the voice technology. The library
uses entry points provided by DVT.
-
Voice Protocol for Internet Messaging (VPIM)
- Standard for digital exchange of voice messages between different
voice mail systems, as defined in Internet Request For Comments (RFC) 1911.
-
voice response unit (VRU)
- (1) Hardware
and software used to answer incoming calls by playing one or more prerecorded
messages.
- (2) A telephony device that uses prerecorded voice responses
to provide information in response to dual-tone multifrequency (DTMF) or voice
input from a telephone caller.
-
voice segment
- The spoken words or
sounds that comprise recorded voice prompts. Each segment in an application
is identified by a group ID and a segment ID and usually includes accompanying
text.
-
voice server node
- In a single system
image (SSI), a server node that contains the voice data. This is usually the
same node as the database server node.
-
voice table
- A grouping of voice segments
used for organizational purposes. Voice tables can be referenced by prompts,
but not by state tables. See also voice directory.
-
VoiceXML
- VoiceXtensible Markup Language.
An XML-based markup language for creating distributed voice applications.
Refer to the VoiceXML forum web site at www.voicexml.org
-
void function
- A function that does
not return a value.
-
VoIP
- See Voice
over Internet Protocol.
-
volatile attribute
- An attribute of
a data object that indicates the object is changeable. Any expression referring
to a volatile object is evaluated immediately (for example, assignments).
-
volatile storage
- A storage device
whose contents are lost when power is cut off. See also nonvolatile storage.
-
volatile table
- A table whose cardinality
can vary significantly over relatively short periods of time. Compared to
statistics collected for non-volatile tables, statistics collected for volatile
tables are less likely to represent the actual data in the tables. The optimizer
takes this into account when determining access plans involving a volatile
table.
-
VOLSER
- See volume serial number.
-
volume
- A discrete unit of storage
on disk, tape or other data recording medium that supports some form of identifier
and parameter list, such as a volume label or input/output control.
-
volume attribute
- An attributes of
a volume in a tape library, such as volume category, type of volume, or assigned-policy
construct name.
-
volume catalog
- An integrated catalog
facility (ICF) user catalog containing the volume and library entries associated
with tape libraries.
-
volume expiration date
- The date the
volume should expire based on the highest expiration date of the data sets
that reside on the volume.
-
volume full threshold
- A value that
indicates when a volume should be marked as full. This threshold specifies
a number of free KB for the volume; when the number falls below this threshold,
the volume is marked full.
-
volume header record
- The record in
the DFSMSdss dump tape that identifies and contains data pertinent to the
entire volume, and identifies the type of operation that created a dump.
-
volume label
- An area on tape or disk
that is used to identify the tape volume and its owner.
-
volume mount analyzer
- A program that
assists in the analysis of the current tape environment, allowing identification
of the most desirable data sets for redirection to the direct access storage
device (DASD) buffer for management using storage management subsystem (SMS)
facilities.
-
volume pool
- In DFSMShsm, a set of
related primary volumes.
-
volume positioning
- Rotating the tape
reel or cartridge so that the read/write head is at a particular point on
the tape.
-
volume record
- A record containing
information related to a volume, such as volume serial number (VOLSER), library
name, and storage group. The volume record resides within the tape configuration
database (TCDB).
-
volume serial number (VOLSER)
- An
identification number in a volume label that is assigned when a volume is
prepared for use on the system.
-
volume statistics
- Statistical information
about the activity on a tape, diskette, or cartridge volume including statistics
about the session (such as the number of read, write, and retry operations),
and lifetime (accumulated) statistics (such as the number of read and write
errors and the number of bytes read and written).
-
volume status
- In the storage management
subsystem (SMS), an indicator of the availability of a volume for system management:
the volume is not ready for system management because it contains data sets
that are ineligible for system management; the volume is ready for system
management because all of the data sets on a volume have an associated storage
class and are cataloged in an integrated catalog facility (ICF) catalog; the
volume will not be managed by the system because it contains no system-managed
data sets and has not been initialized as system-managed. See also physical volume status.
-
volume switch
- Action taken by CICS
to archive a journal data set when it is full, while continuing to write to
a second data set.
-
volume table of contents (VTOC)
- (1) A table on a direct access volume that describes the location, size and other
characteristics of each data set on the volume. Each entry is a data set control
block (DSCB).
- (2) An area on a disk or diskette that describes the
location, size, and other characteristics of each file, library, and folder
on the disk or diskette.
-
volume trailer record
- The record
in the DFSMSdss dump tape that identifies the end of the data for a direct
access storage device (DASD) volume.
-
volume type
- A unique identifier of
the type of volume. For example, tape volume types include physical, logical,
stacked logical, imported logical, and exported logical volumes (LVOLs).
-
Voronoi cell
- A region on the surface
of the Earth that has boundaries with neighboring regions. The boundaries
are defined by the geodesic distances between the center point of the Voronoi
cell and the center points of its neighbors. A Voronoi cell consists of all
points that are closer to the center of the Voronoi cell than to the center
of any other Voronoi cell.
-
Voronoi cell structure
- A subdivision
of the Earth's surface into cells where every point within a particular cell
is closer to the center point of that cell than to the center point of any
other cell.
-
vote
- In the two-phase commit protocol,
the response of an agent to the request of the initiator. The application
transaction program uses the responses to determine if it should commit or
roll back its protected resources.
-
voted read-only (VRO)
- The voted read-only
logical unit of work (LUW) state indicates that the current LUW had no pending
changes, was allowed to vote read-only, and did so.
-
vote read-only
- The response, to a
Prepare presentation services header with a Forget presentation services header,
by the agent when no changes have been made to the resources, for the optimization
of the two-phase commit flows.
-
VPA
- See valid
printable area.
-
VPACK
- A component consisting of a
base card, which connects to the digital trunk adapter in the RS/6000, and
a trunk interface card (TIC), which manages the trunk connection to the switch.
The single digital trunk processor contains one VPACK, and the multiple digital
trunk processor contains slots for up to five VPACKs. See also XPACK, SPACK.
-
VPC
- See virtual
path connection.
-
VPD
- See vital
product data.
-
VPIM
- See Voice
Protocol for Internet Messaging.
-
VPN
- See virtual
private network.
-
VRO
- See voted
read-only.
-
VRS
- See vital
record specification.
-
VRU
- See voice
response unit.
-
VS
- (1) See virtual
storage.
- (2) See virtual synchrony.
-
VSAM
- See Virtual
Storage Access Method.
-
VSAM catalog
- A special key-sequenced
data set (KSDS) with an index containing extensive data set and volume information
that the Virtual Storage Access Method (VSAM) requires to locate data sets
or files, allocate and deallocate storage space, verify the authorization
of a program or operator to gain access to a file, and accumulate usage statistics
for data sets or files. VSAM catalogs have been functionally replaced by integrated
catalog facility (ICF) catalogs. VSAM catalogs are not supported by z/OS.
-
VSAM record-level sharing (VSAM RLS)
- An extension to the Virtual Storage Access Method (VSAM) that provides direct
record-level sharing of VSAM data sets from multiple address spaces across
multiple systems. Record-level sharing uses the z/OS Coupling Facility (CF)
to provide cross-system locking, local buffer invalidation, and cross-system
data caching. Contrast with global shared resources and local shared resources.
See also SMSVSAM, global
shared resource, local shared resource.
-
VSAM RLS
- See VSAM record-level sharing.
-
VSAM shared information (VSI)
- Blocks
that are used for cross-system sharing.
-
VSAM shared resources
- Buffers and
strings shared by several VSAM data files. This is defined to CICS in the
file control table.
-
VSAM sphere
- The base cluster of a
Virtual Storage Access Method (VSAM) data set and its associated alternate
indexes.
-
VSAM volume control record (VVCR)
- The first logical record in the VSAM volume data set (VVDS) that contains
information to manage direct access storage device (DASD) space and the basic
catalog structure (BCS) back pointers.
-
VSAM volume data set (VVDS)
- A data
set that describes the characteristics of the Virtual Storage Access Method
(VSAM) and system-managed data sets residing on a given direct access storage
device (DASD) volume. A VVDS is part of an integrated catalog facility (ICF)
catalog. See also integrated catalog facility catalog, basic catalog structure.
-
VSAM volume record (VVR)
- A Virtual
Storage Access Method (VSAM) logical record within a VSAM volume data set
(VVDS).
-
VSAM work area (VSWA)
- An area that
is acquired dynamically by the file control program when accessing a VSAM
data set.
-
VSCR
- See virtual
storage constraint relief.
-
VSE
- See Virtual
Storage Extended.
-
VSE/Data Interfile Transfer, Testing, and Operations
Utility (VSE/DITTO)
- In CICS/VSE, An IBM licensed program that
provides file-to-file services for disk, tape, and card devices.
-
VSE/DITTO
- See VSE/Data Interfile Transfer, Testing, and Operations Utility.
-
VSE/ICCF
- See VSE/Interactive Computing and Control Facility.
-
VSE image
- In CICS/VSE, a single copy
of the VSE operating system. Note that a single processing environment can
support more than one VSE image. See also multi-VSE
environment, single-VSE environment.
-
VSE/Interactive Computing and Control Facility
(VSE/ICCF)
- In CICS/VSE, an IBM licensed program that serves as
interface, on a time-slice basis, to authorized users of terminals linked
to the system's processor.
-
VSE/POWER
- An IBM licensed program
primarily used to spool input and output. The networking functions of the
program enable a VSE system to exchange files with or run jobs on another
remote processor.
-
V-Series Recommendations
- A document,
CCITT Recommendation V-Series, that outlines standards for the interface between
data terminal equipment (DTE) and a synchronous modem.
-
VSI
- See VSAM
shared information.
-
VSO
- See Virtual
Storage Option.
-
VSS
- See vector
symbol set.
-
VSWA
- See VSAM
work area.
-
VT100
- A character-mode work station.
Characters are sent immediately to the host system when a key is pressed.
-
VT100 workstation protocol
- i5/OS
support for the VT100 work station protocol that allows a user to access,
using TELNET VT100 client support, VT100 application programs on other systems
in a TCP/IP network. Users on other systems with a TELNET VT100 client emulation
package are able to access i5/OS application programs through the i5/OS TELNET
VT100 server.
-
VT220
- A character-mode work station.
Characters are sent immediately to the host system when a key is pressed.
-
VT220 workstation
- An ASCII full-screen
workstation manufactured by Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC).
-
VT220 workstation protocol
- i5/OS
support for the VT220 work station protocol that allows a user to access,
using TELNET VT220 client support, VT220 application programs on other systems
in a TCP/IP network. Users on other systems with a TELNET VT220 client emulation
package are able to access i5/OS application programs through the i5/OS TELNET
VT220 server.
-
VTAM
- See Virtual
Telecommunications Access Method.
-
VTAM application name
- The name an
installation gives to an IMS subsystem to identify the subsystem to VTAM.
-
VTAM application program
- A program
that has opened an access method control block (ACB) to identify itself to
VTAM and that can therefore issue VTAM macroinstructions.
-
VTAM exit trace
- A CICS exit driven
by VTAM to return control after servicing a request issued by CICS. Every
such exit contains a trace point. This provides a way of tracing VTAM requests
made from CICS.
-
VTAM Generic Resources (VGR)
- IMS
VGR, together with VTAM V4R2, enable VTAM to automatically distribute terminal
sessions among a cooperative set of IMS systems known as a generic resource
group.
-
VTAMPARS
- See VTAM Performance Analysis and Reporting System.
-
VTAM Performance Analysis and Reporting System
(VTAMPARS)
- An IBM licensed program that provides information on
network traffic through the VTAM component of the network.
-
VTAM Terminal Block (VTCB)
- An IMS
control block that represents a VTAM terminal, both static and dynamic. The
VTCB contains the following IMS control blocks and data areas: CLB, CTB,
CRB, CIB, DDM work area, and CTT.
-
VTCB
- See VTAM
Terminal Block.
-
VTM
- See virtual
terminal manager.
-
VTM/FM
- See virtual terminal manager/function manager.
-
VTOC
- See volume
table of contents.
-
VTOC copy data set
- A data set that
contains a copy of the volume table of contents (VTOC) entry for each data
set that DFSMShsm backs up or dumps.
-
VTOC index
- The data set on which
the location of the data-set volume table of contents (VTOC) entries is kept
in an index for quick access by direct access device space management (DADSM).
-
V-type constant (V-con)
- A constant
that contains an address.
-
VVCR
- See VSAM
volume control record.
-
VVDS
- See VSAM
volume data set.
-
VVR
- See VSAM
volume record.
|
|
|
 |
-
W3C
- See World
Wide Web Consortium.
-
WACK character
- See wait-before-transmitting positive acknowledgment character.
-
WADS
- See write-ahead
data set.
-
WAIS
- See Wide
Area Information Service.
-
wait
- A state allowing a parent process
to synchronize with the execution of an exit issued by a child process.
-
wait-before-transmitting positive acknowledgment
character (WACK character)
- A BSC character sequence sent by a
receiving station to indicate that it is temporarily not ready to receive.
-
waiter
- A thread waiting for a connection.
-
Wake on LAN
- A technology that enables
a user to remotely turn on systems for off-hours maintenance. A result of
the Intel-IBM Advanced Manageability Alliance and part of the Wired for Management
Baseline Specification, users of this technology can remotely turn on a server
and control it across the network, thus saving time on automated software
installations, upgrades, disk backups, and virus scans.
-
walk
- An SNMP operation that is used
to discover all object instances of management information implemented in
the SNMP agent that can be accessed by the SNMP manager.
-
WAN
- See wide
area network.
-
WAP
- See Wireless
Application Protocol.
-
WAR
- See Web
archive.
-
ward
- A section of a double-byte character
set (DBCS) where the first byte of the DBCS codes belonging to that section
are the same value. According to IBM standards for DBCS codes, there are 190
wards, and each ward has up to 190 points on which DBCS characters can be
assigned. See also point.
-
warehouse
- A persistent, historical
data store for events (or messages). The Warehouse node within a message flow
supports the recording of information in a database for subsequent retrieval
and processing by other applications.
-
warehouse agent
- Software that manages
the flow of data between one or more data sources and one or more target warehouses.
Warehouse agents use Open Database Connectivity (ODBC) drivers or the DB2
command line interface (CLI) to communicate with different databases.
-
warehouse agent site
- See agent site.
-
Warehouse Center control database
- The database that contains the control tables that are required to store Warehouse
Center metadata.
-
warehouse enablement pack
- A separately
installable part of a Tivoli software product that provides Tivoli Enterprise
Data Warehouse functionality. The warehouse enablement pack provides extract,
transform, and load programs to populate the central data warehouse and to
create data marts as well as customizable reports to answer specific business
questions. See also extract, transform, and load.
-
warehouse pack
- See warehouse enablement pack.
-
warehouse source
- A subset of tables
and views from a single database, or a set of files, that have been defined
to the Data Warehouse Center.
-
warehouse target
- A subset of tables,
indexes, and aliases from a single database that are managed by the Data Warehouse
Center.
-
WAR file
- See Web archive.
-
warm keypoint
- A keypoint written
to the restart data set during controlled shutdown (after all system activity
has ceased). During a subsequent warm restart, information in the warm keypoint
is used to reestablish system tables to the status they had at controlled
shutdown.
-
warm start
- (1) A restart that allows
reuse of previously initialized input and output work queues. See also cold start.
- (2) See normal restart.
- (3) Initialization of a CICS system using selected
system status information obtained during the previous termination.
- (4) The normal DB2 restart process, which involves reading and processing
log records so that data that is under the control of DB2 is consistent.
See also cold start.
-
warning mode
- The operating mode in
which DFSMSrmm validates volumes as they are used, issuing warning messages
when it discovers errors instead of rejecting volumes. See also record-only mode, manual mode.
-
watchpoint
- A breakpoint that suspends
execution when a specified field or expression is modified.
-
waterfall model
- A model of the software
development process in which the constituent activities (such as a concept,
requirements, design, implementation, test, installation and checkout phases)
occur only once, in sequence, with little or no overlap.
-
WAV
- A format to store digitally recorded
sound.
-
WBEM
- (1) See Web
Based Enterprise Management.
- (2) See Web-Based
Enterprise Management.
-
WBEM profile
- See Web Based Enterprise Management profile.
-
WBMP
- See wireless
bitmap.
-
WBS
- See work
breakdown structure.
-
WBS Package
- A node in the work breakdown
structure (WBS) that consists of a deliverable, a work package or a summary
task along with its child elements.
-
WBXML
- See Wireless Binary XML.
-
WCC
- See write
control character.
-
WCCM
- See WebSphere
Common Configuration Model.
-
WCCmd Web service
- A Web service for
a specific WebSphere Commerce command. There can be several of these Web services,
one for each WebSphere Commerce command to which the server needs to communicate.
-
W-CDMA
- See wideband code division multiple access.
-
WCL
- See Tivoli
Presentation Services Web Component Library.
-
WCS
- See writable
control storage.
-
WDF
- See Wireless
Data Forum.
-
weak export
- An export that allows
several definitions for the same external symbol. Each weak export has an
associated key value, which is the size of the data item. The binder chooses
the weak export with the largest key value. See also strong export.
-
weak external reference
- A special
type of external reference that is not to be resolved by automatic library
calls unless an ordinary external reference to the same symbol is found. The
external symbol dictionary entry specifies the symbol; the location is unknown.
-
weak key
- In Cryptographic Support,
a value for a key-encrypting key that has known techniques that a code breaker
can use to decrypt a data-encrypting key encrypted with this value.
-
Web (WWW)
- See World Wide Web.
-
Web activity monitor
- In HTTP Server
for i5/OS, a function that automatically creates reports (host name or Internet
Protocol (IP) address, method, return code, and URL information) about visits
to your Web site.
-
Web application
- An application that
is accessible by a Web browser and that provides some function beyond static
display of information, for instance by allowing the user to query a database.
Common components of a Web application include HTML pages, JSP pages, and
servlets.
-
Web application document root
- The
location within the file system where an application's Web assets are stored
(such as static HTML, JSP files, and GIFs).
-
Web application server
- The runtime
environment for dynamic Web applications. A Java EE Web application server
implements the services of the Java EE standard.
-
Web application service
- A service
that supports Web browser access to the Sametime server.
-
Web application Web path
- The portion
of a URL associated with a Web application.
-
Web archive (WAR)
- A compressed file
format, defined by the Java EE standard, for storing all the resources required
to install and run a Web application in a single file. See also enterprise archive, Java archive.
-
Web-based application
- An application
that is downloaded from the Web each time it is run. The advantage is that
the application can be run from any computer, and the software is routinely
upgraded and maintained by the hosting organization rather than by each individual
user.
-
Web-based Distributed Authoring and Versioning
(WebDAV)
- A set of extensions to the HTTP protocol that allows
users to collaboratively edit and manage files on remote web servers.
-
Web Based Enterprise Management (WBEM)
- A set of Distributed Management Task Force (DMTF) standards that defines
the protocols used to communicate with a particular Common Information Model
(CIM) implementation that uses CIM servers.
-
Web-Based Enterprise Management (WBEM)
- A tiered enterprise-management architecture that was developed by the
Distributed Management Task Force (DMTF). This architecture provides the management
design framework that consists of devices, device providers, the object manager,
and the messaging protocol for the communication between client applications
and the object manager.
-
Web Based Enterprise Management profile (WBEM
profile)
- A collection of Common Information Model (CIM) elements
and behavioral rules that represent a specific area of management. It is a
well-defined subset of the CIM schema.
-
Web-based System Manager
- A graphical
user interface (GUI) tool for managing some operating systems, like AIX and
i5/OS. Based on the object-oriented (OO) model, Web-based System Manager enables
users to perform administration tasks by manipulating icons that represent
objects on the system, as an alternative to learning and remembering complex
commands.
-
Web broadcast
- Web delivered video
that is used conduct live software demonstrations and presentations.
-
Web browser
- A client program that
initiates requests to a Web server and displays the information that the server
returns.
-
webcast
- A live audio or video program
that is broadcast over the Web.
-
Web component
- (1) A field or control
that is on the Web page of a Web application.
- (2) A servlet, JavaServer
Pages (JSP) file, or a HyperText Markup Language (HTML) file. One or more
Web components make up a Web module.
-
Web conference
- An interactive workshop,
lecture or seminar that is delivered over the Web.
-
Web container
- A container that implements
the Web component contract of the Java EE architecture. (Sun)
-
Web container channel
- A type of channel
within a transport chain that creates a bridge in the transport chain between
an HTTP inbound channel and a servlet or JavaServer Pages (JSP) engine.
-
Web content
- Files and other resources
that compose a Web site. Web content may consist of image files, audio files,
HTML files, JSP files, style sheets, database entries, or anything you can
see on a Web site.
-
Web controller
- An adapter to the
WebSphere Commerce commands. There can be different types of Web controllers,
one for each client invocation protocol, such as the HTTP request or WebSphere
MQ request.
-
Web Copy Services
- See ESS Copy Services.
-
Web crawler
- A type of crawler that
explores the Web by retrieving a Web document and following the links within
that document.
-
WebDAV
- See Web-based Distributed Authoring and Versioning.
-
Web diagram
- A Struts file that uses
icons and other images on a free-form surface to help application developers
visualize the flow structure of a Struts-based Web application.
-
Web Express Logon (WEL)
- A HATS feature
that enables users to log onto several hosts using a set of credentials that
are authenticated by a network security layer.
-
WebFacing Tool
- A tool to convert
existing 5250 interfaces to browser-based graphical user interfaces.
-
webinar
- See Web conference.
-
Web interaction
- A single input and
output sequence between a Web browser and a host program.
-
Web interface extension
- A piece of
software designed to run as an operating system application (a Windows application
or a UNIX application). The Web interface extension allows the administrator
to remotely take control of hosts on which it is installed.
-
weblog
- A Web page that provides frequent
continuing publication of thoughts, comments, and Web links on a specific
topic or subject (broad or narrow in scope), often in the form of short entries
arranged in reverse chronological order, the most recently added piece of
information appearing first. See also blogging, blogger.
-
webmaster
- The person who is ultimately
responsible for managing and maintaining a particular Web site.
-
Web module
- A unit that consists of
one or more Web components and a Web deployment descriptor. (Sun)
-
Web Ontology Language (OWL)
- A language
that is used to explicitly represent the meaning of terms in vocabularies
and the relationships between those terms. OWL is intended to be used when
the information contained in documents needs to be processed by applications,
as opposed to situations where the content only needs to be presented to humans.
See also ontology.
-
Web pad
- A handheld, touch-screen
wireless device for Web browsing.
-
Web page
- Any document that can be
accessed by a URL on the World Wide Web.
-
Web portal
- A single point of access
to information that is from logically linked business services, presenting
information from diverse sources uniformly.
-
Web project
- A container for other
resources such as source files and metadata that corresponds to the Java EE-defined
container structure and hierarchy of files necessary for Web applications
to be deployed.
-
Web property extension (WPX)
- IBM
extension to the standard deployment descriptors for Web applications. These
extensions include Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) filtering
and servlet caching.
-
Web resource
- Any one of the resources
that are created during the development of a Web application for example Web
projects, HTML pages, JavaServer Pages (JSP) files, servlets, custom tag libraries,
and archive files.
-
Web resource collection
- A list of
URL patterns and HTTP methods that describe a set of resources to be protected.
(Sun)
-
Web seminar
- See Web conference.
-
Web server
- A software program that
is capable of servicing Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) requests.
-
Web server plug-in
- A software module
that supports the Web server in communicating requests for dynamic content,
such as servlets, to the application server.
-
Web server separation
- A topology
where the Web server is physically separated from the application server.
-
Web service
- (1) A self-contained, self-describing
modular application that can be published, discovered, and invoked over a
network using standard network protocols. Typically, XML is used to tag the
data, SOAP is used to transfer the data, WSDL is used for describing the services
available, and UDDI is used for listing what services are available.
- (2) An application that performs specific tasks and is accessible through
open protocols such as HTTP and SOAP.
-
Web service endpoint
- An entity that
is the destination for Web service messages. A Web service endpoint has a
Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) address and is described by a Web Service
Definition Language (WSDL) port element.
-
Web service interface
- A group of
operations described by the content of a Web Service Definition Language (WSDL)
1.1 port element. These operations can provide access to resource properties
and metadata. (OASIS)
-
Web Services Business Process Execution Language
(WS-BPEL)
- See Business Process Execution
Language.
-
Web Services Description Language (WSDL)
- An XML-based specification for describing networked services as a set
of endpoints operating on messages containing either document-oriented or
procedure-oriented information.
-
Web service semantics (WSDL-S)
- A
technical specification that defines a mechanism to associate semantic annotations
with Web services that are described using Web Service Description Language
(WSDL).
-
Web Services Interoperability Organization (WSI)
- An open industry organization that promotes Web services interoperability
across platforms, operating systems, and programming languages.
-
Web Services Invocation Framework (WSIF)
- A Java API that supports dynamic invoking of Web services, regardless
of the format in which the service is implemented or the access mechanism.
-
Web Services Invocation Language (WSIL)
- An XML document format that facilitates the discovery of existing Web
services and provides a set of rules for how inspection-related information
should be made available for consumption.
-
Web Services Policy Framework (WS-Policy)
- A model and framework for describing the capabilities, requirements,
and general characteristics of a Web service as a policy assertion or a collection
of policy assertions. See also policy assertion.
-
Web Services Resource (WS-Resource)
- A stateful resource that provides the data values that a Web service requires
to execute a message exchange. See also resource property, Web Services Resource Framework.
-
Web Services Resource Framework (WSRF)
- The set of specifications that define the specific rendering of a Web
Services Resource (WS-Resource), the association of that resource with the
Web service interface, and the messages that define the querying and updating
of the properties of that resource. See also Web Services
Resource.
-
Web Services Resource Properties
- A specification that provides the declaration of exposed resource properties
of a managed resource; that is, it provides the stateful information of the
resource.
-
Web site
- A related collection of
files available on the Web that is managed by a single entity (an organization
or an individual) and contains information in hypertext for its users. A Web
site often includes hypertext links to other Web sites.
-
WebSphere
- An IBM brand name that
encompasses tools for developing e-business applications and middleware for
running Web applications.
-
WebSphere Application Server
- Web
application server software that runs on a Web server and that can be used
to deploy, integrate, execute, and manage e-business applications.
-
WebSphere BI for FN Extension for SWIFTNet
- The extension supporting the SWIFTNet services InterAct and FIN. It
also provides the integration of SWIFT Alliance Gateway (SAG).
-
WebSphere BI for FN instance
- A set
of customized WebSphere MQ Integrator message brokers for WebSphere BI for
FN central processing and a set of commands for administration and operation.
-
WebSphere BI for FN message
- A WebSphere
MQ message that has a folder labeled ComIbmDni in the MQRFH2 header. This
folder provides the data that is required by WebSphere BI for FN to process
the message.
-
WebSphere BI for FN server
- Part of
a WebSphere BI for FN instance. It consists of various services defined and
assigned during customization. A server has a one-to-one relationship to a
queue manager and a WebSphere MQ Integrator broker.
-
WebSphere business integration administrator
- The person who has the access and responsibility to install,
configure, and maintain the WebSphere business integration system. On an NT
system, the WebSphere business integration administrator account is set up
with administrator privileges, while on a UNIX system, the WebSphere business
integration administrator account is a user account with write privileges,
set up by the root user.
-
WebSphere business integration system
- An enterprise solution that moves information among diverse sources
to perform business exchanges, and that processes and routes information among
disparate applications in the enterprise environment. The business integration
system consists of an integration broker and one or more adapters.
-
WebSphere Commerce Accelerator
- In
WebSphere Commerce, a workbench of online tools used to maintain online stores
through various store operations.
-
WebSphere Commerce database
- The database
that contains the operational data for online stores.
-
WebSphere Commerce instance
- A unique
configuration of WebSphere Commerce to support an e-commerce Web site, which
may contain one or multiple stores.
-
WebSphere Commerce Recommendation Engine
- Powered by LikeMinds, the software responsible for implementing collaborative
filtering recommendations.
-
WebSphere Commerce Server
- The server
that handles the store- and commerce-related functions of an e-commerce solution.
The WebSphere Commerce Server provides all of the WebSphere Commerce functionality
in a Web container and an EJB container.
-
WebSphere Common Configuration Model (WCCM)
- A model for programmatic access to configuration data used by the WebSphere
Application Server tooling, run time, and administrative console.
-
WebSphere InterChange Server Access
- See IBM WebSphere InterChange Server Access.
-
WebSphere MQ
- A family of IBM licensed
programs that provides message queuing services.
-
WebSphere MQ Administration Interface (MQAI)
- A programming interface that performs administration tasks on
a WebSphere MQ queue manager through the use of data bags. Data bags allow
the user to handle properties (or parameters) of WebSphere MQ objects.
-
WebSphere MQ classes for Java Message Service
- A set of Java classes that implement Java Message Service (JMS)
interfaces by Sun Microsystems, Inc. to enable JMS programs to access WebSphere
MQ systems.
-
WebSphere MQ client
- Part of a WebSphere
MQ product that can be installed on a system without installing the full queue
manager. The WebSphere MQ client accepts MQI calls from applications and communicates
with a queue manager on a server system. See also client.
-
WebSphere MQ Enterprise Transport
- A transport protocol supported by WebSphere Business Integration Message Broker
that enables WebSphere MQ application clients to connect to brokers.
-
WebSphere MQ Mobile Transport
- A transport
protocol supported by WebSphere Business Integration Message Broker that enables
WebSphere MQ Everyplace application clients to connect to brokers.
-
WebSphere MQ Multicast Transport
- A transport protocol supported by WebSphere Business Integration Message Broker
that enables dedicated JMS application clients to connect to brokers. This
protocol is optimized for high volume, one-to-many publish/subscribe topologies.
-
WebSphere MQ Real-time Transport
- A transport protocol supported by WebSphere Business Integration Message Broker
that enables dedicated JMS application clients to connect to brokers.
-
WebSphere MQ script command (MQSC)
- A human readable command, uniform across all platforms, that is used to manipulate
WebSphere MQ objects. See also programmable command
format.
-
WebSphere MQ server
- A queue manager
that provides queuing services to one or more clients. All the WebSphere MQ
objects, for example queues, exist only on the queue manager system, that
is, on the MQI server machine. A server can support normal local MQI applications
as well.
-
WebSphere MQ Telemetry Transport
- A transport protocol supported by WebSphere Business Integration Message Broker
that enables SCADA devices to connect to brokers. This protocol is a lightweight
publish/subscribe protocol that flows over TCP/IP that uses a subset of UTF-8.
-
WebSphere MQ Web Services Transport
- A transport protocol supported by WebSphere Business Integration Message Broker
that enables HTTP compliant application clients to connect to brokers.
-
WebSphere Studio
- A family of IBM
software products that are based on the Eclipse open-source platform and provide
a consistent set of tools for developing e-business applications.
-
WebSphere test environment
- A runtime
environment that is integrated into the Rational development workbench for
testing applications that are targeted for WebSphere Application Server.
-
web system
- A hyper media system that
contains pages of information that are linked to each other in the form of
a graph, as opposed to being hierarchical or linear. A web system can manifest
itself as a Web server that can be accessed through a browser.
-
Web usage mining
- In HTTP Server for
i5/OS, a function that automatically creates reports (user, path, and group-based
information) about visits to a Web site.
-
weekly activity
- In Backup, Recovery,
and Media Services, an activity plan contained in the control group that specifies
which days of the week that processing is to occur.
-
weight
- (1) A value attached to a character
in a sort sequence that permits automatic ordering of a series of characters.
- (2) An importance factor that is used to balance scorecard responses
and timesheets.
-
weighted term search
- A query in which
certain terms are given more importance.
-
WEL
- See Web
Express Logon.
-
welcome page
- See home page.
-
well-known address
- An address that
is used to uniquely identify a particular node in the network to establish
connections between nodes. The well-known address is a combination of the
network address and the port used on the logical node.
-
well-known endpoint
- In DCE Remote
Procedure Call (RPC), a preassigned, stable endpoint that a server can use
every time it runs. Well-known endpoints typically are assigned by a central
authority responsible for transport control.
-
well-known service
- A service that
uses a specific port number below 1024. An example of a well-known service
is File Transfer Protocol (FTP), which uses port 21.
-
what you see is what you get (WYSIWYG)
- A capability of an editor to continually display pages exactly as they
will be printed or otherwise rendered.
-
while loop
- A loop that repeats the
same sequence of activities as long as some condition is satisfied. The while
loop tests its condition at the beginning of every loop. If the condition
is false from the start, the sequence of activities contained in the loop
never runs.
-
while statement
- A looping statement
that executes one or more instructions repeatedly during the time that a condition
is true.
-
whiteboard
- (1) A data-sharing component
of Sametime that can be a blank board on which users draw with tools or on
which they present files that have been attached.
- (2) A feature that
can be used during a session to present files, type text, and draw objects
such as circles or rectangles in order to emphasize important information
in presentations.
-
white paper
- An article that gives
a high-level technical explanation of an architecture, framework, or product
technology.
-
white space
- A sequence of one or
more characters, such as the blank character, the newline character, or the
tab character, that belong to the space character class.
-
Who Is Here (WIH)
- A Sametime awareness
service that Provides place-based awareness services. A place is defined by
a place name, a unique identifier that can be a URL, a database ID, a document
ID, or any other identifier. See also awareness component, forum, presence list.
-
Who Is Online (WIO)
- A Sametime awareness
component that provides awareness services on users in the community, not
restricted to a specific place. The client submits a list of user IDs and/or
group IDs to the server. The server notifies the client whenever there are
changes in the status of the users in the list. See also awareness component, presence list.
-
whole number
- In REXX, an integer
or a number that has a zero decimal part. Whole numbers are not usually expressed
by the language processor in exponential notation.
-
Wide Area Information Service (WAIS)
- A network information system that enables clients to search documents on the
World Wide Web.
-
wide area network (WAN)
- A network
that provides communication services among devices in a geographic area larger
than that served by a local area network (LAN
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