NonStop S-Series Hardware Installation and FastPath Guide (G06.25+)

Glossary
HP NonStop S-Series Hardware Installation and FastPath Guide529443-001
Glossary-90
RESTORE
requesting device wanted to have read. See also request packet, ServerNet packet,
and ServerNet transaction.
RESTORE. A utility for HP NonStop™ servers that copies files from a backup tape to disk.
See also BACKUP.
RFC. Request for Comments. Documents compiled by number by the Internet Engineering
Task Force (IETF) that define standards for intercommunication.
RFI. See radio frequency interference (RFI).
RIPC. See remote interprocessor communication (RIPC).
RISC. See reduced instruction-set computing (RISC).
RISC instructions. See MIPS RISC instructions.
RISC processor. An instruction processing unit (IPU) that is based on reduced
instruction-set computing (RISC) architecture. TNS/R processors contain RISC
processors.
rld library. A library that loads position-independent code (PIC) programs and their
associated dynamic-link libraries (DLLs). The rld library also provides the dlopen(),
dlclose(), dlresultcode(), dlsys(), and dlerror() functions.
RMAF. See requester missed address file (RMAF).
rms. See root mean square (rms).
robot. A media-changer device that transfers a tape cartridge to a tape drive for use and
then returns the cartridge to the storage cell.
root. See root fileset and root directory. See also super ID.
root directory. In the Open System Services (OSS) file system and Network File System
(NFS), a directory associated with a process that the system uses for pathname
resolution when a pathname begins with a slash (/) character.
root fileset. For the Open System Services (OSS) file system, the fileset with the device
identifier of 0, normally containing the root directory. HP recommends that this fileset
be named root.
root mean square (rms). A measurement method used to determine the direct current
(DC) equivalent value for alternating voltage and current waveforms. The rms method
refers to the process of sampling a waveform, squaring the samples, averaging the
samples (mean value) over the period from one cycle, and then calculating the square
root of the samples. In general, rms-sensing devices are more accurate than averaging
meters. Measurements from averaging meters can be as low as 30 percent of the
actual current for loads with high crest factors.