TCP/IPv6 Migration Guide
Glossary
HP NonStop TCP/IPv6 Migration Guide—524524-004
Glossary-15
object
object. (1) In general HP use, one or more of the devices, lines, processes, and files in an 
HP subsystem; any entity subject to independent reference or control by one or more 
subsystems. (2) In DSM use, an entity subject to independent reference and control by 
a subsystem: for example, the disk volume $DATA or the data communications line 
$X2502. An object typically has a name and a type known to the controlling 
subsystem. 
object-name template. In DSM, a name that stands for more than one object. Such a name 
includes one or more wild-card characters, such as * and ?. See also wild-card 
character. 
object type. In DSM, the category of objects to which a specific object belongs: for 
example, a specific disk file might have the object type FILE, and a specific terminal 
might have the object type SU (subdevice). A subsystem identifies a set of object types 
by the objects it manages. The SCF interfaces to HP data communications 
subsystems use standard keywords to identify the types. The corresponding 
programmatic interfaces have object-type numbers (represented by symbolic names 
such as ZCOM-OBJ-SU) suitable for passing to the SPI SSINIT procedure. 
open system. Any computer system that adheres to the OSI standards.
Open Systems Interconnection. A set of standards used for the interconnection of 
heterogeneous computer systems, thus providing universal connectivity.
OSI. See Open Systems Interconnection.
OSI Reference Model. A communications architecture, adopted by the ISO in 1984, that 
includes seven layers that define the functions involved in communications between 
two systems, the services required to perform these functions, and the protocols 
associated with these services.
packet. The unit of data sent across a packet switching network. While some Internet 
literature uses it to refer specifically to data sent across a physical network, other 
literature views the Internet as a packet switching network and describes IP datagrams 
as packets.
Packet Internet Groper (PING). The name of a program used in the Internet to test the 
reachability of destinations by sending them an ICMP echo request and waiting for a 
reply. The term has survived the original program and is now used as a verb, as in 
“please ping host A to see if it is alive.”
packet switching. A technique in which messages are broken into smaller units, called 
packets, that can be individually addressed and routed through the network. The 
receiving-end node ascertains whether all the packets are received and in the proper 
sequence before forwarding the complete message to the addressee.
path MTU. the minimum link MTU of all the links in a path between a source node and a 
destination node.










