Open SCSI Integrator's Manual for NonStop S-Series Servers
Glossary
Open SCSI Integrator’s Manual for NonStop Servers—422988-002
Glossary-2
backplane
backplane. A board that has connectors, on one or both sides of the board, into which circuit 
board assemblies plug. Backplanes are located behind card cages.
backup processor. A processor in the HP NonStop operating system that communicates with 
the primary processor, allowing the processors to remain independent. A component 
failure in one processor has no effect on any other processor. Contrast with primary 
processor.
base enclosure. An enclosure that is placed on the floor and can have other enclosures 
stacked on top of it. A base enclosure is installed on a frame base. Contrast with 
stackable enclosure
.
battery load. The electrical current drain imposed on a battery.
BIC. Backplane interconnect card. Not applicable to Himalaya S-series servers. See 
ServerNet adapter
.
bit-synchronous. A type of Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) Layer-2 protocol that uses 
synchronous transmission but does not require a character code to define terminal and 
line control sequences.
block. A grouping of one or more system enclosures that a Himalaya S-series system 
recognizes and supports as one unit. A block can consist of either one processor 
enclosure, one I/O enclosure, or one processor enclosure with one or more I/O 
enclosures attached.
cable channel. A cable management conduit that protects the cables that run between two 
system enclosures in a double-high stack. Each system enclosure has two cable channels 
running vertically on its service side: one on the left-hand side of the enclosure, and one 
on the right-hand side of the enclosure.
cable guidepost. A cable management rod that routes cables exiting the upper enclosure in a 
double-high stack to prevent the cables from hanging down in front of the 
customer-replaceable units (CRUs) in the base enclosure. A cable guidepost extends 
from the base of each cable channel.
cable support. A piece of cable management hardware that secures system cables. The cable 
support attaches to the service side of a system enclosure near the bottom of the 
enclosure. Cable ties for securing system cables are threaded through the cable support. 
The cable support also contains the group and module ID labels and the rear group 
service light-emitting diode (LED).
cache (cache memory). A small, fast memory holding recently accessed data designed to 
speed up subsequent access to the same data. Cache memory is built from faster 
memory chips than main memory, and it is most often used with process or main 
memory but also used in network data transfer to maintain a local copy of data.
card cage. A structure made up of slots that hold components such as customer-replaceable 
units (CRUs) and ServerNet adapters.










