TCP/IP Management Programming Manual
Glossary
HP NonStop TCP/IP Management Programming Manual—529636-001
Glossary-16
Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP)
Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP). The Internet standard protocol for transferring 
electronic mail messages from one machine to another. SMTP specifies how two mail 
systems interact, and specifies the format of control messages the two mail systems 
exchange to transfer mail.
simple token. In DSM programmatic interfaces, a token consisting of a token code and a 
value that is either a single elementary field, such as an integer or a character string, or 
a fixed (nonextensible) structure. Compare extensible structured token.
SLSA Subsystem. See ServerNet wide area network (SWAN) concentrator on page -15
SMTP. See Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP).
SNAP. See Subnetwork Access Protocol (SNAP).
SPI.  See Subsystem Programmatic Interface (SPI).
SPI buffer. The buffer that contains an SPI message. See also SPI message. 
SPI message. In DSM programmatic interfaces, a message specially formatted by the SPI 
procedures for communication between a management application and a subsystem or 
between one subsystem and another. An SPI message consists of a collection of 
tokens. Note that an SPI message is a single block of information sent at one time, as 
one interprocess message. There are two types of SPI messages, distinguished by 
different sets of tokens in the header: command and response messages, and event 
messages.
SPI procedures. In DSM, the set of Guardian procedures used to build and decode buffers 
for use in system and network management and in certain other applications.
SPI standard definitions. In DSM programmatic interfaces, the set of declarations 
available for use with the SPI procedures, regardless of the subsystem. There is also a 
set of subsystem-specific declarations for each subsystem, and some sets of 
declarations that apply to multiple subsystems. An application using SPI needs the SPI 
standard definitions and also the subsystem definitions for all subsystems with which it 
communicates. See also definition. Compare data communications standard definitions 
or EMS standard definitions.
subject token. In event management, a device, process, or other named entity about which 
a given event message has information. 
subnet address. An extension of the Internet addressing scheme that allows a site to use a 
single Internet address for multiple physical networks. Outside of the site using subnet 
addressing, routing continues as usual by dividing the destination address into an 
Internet portion and local portion. Gateways and hosts inside a site using subnet 
addressing interpret the local portion of the address by dividing it into a physical 
network portion and host portion.










