C
Return to Glossary.
-
C2
- A level of security defined in
the Trusted Computer System Evaluation Criteria (TCSEC) published by the United
States Government. To meet C2 requirements, a system must perform discretionary
access control, authentication and verification, object reuse protection,
and auditing of security-relevant events.
-
CA
- See certificate
authority.
-
cable path
- A series of cables connected
in sequence.
-
cable-through
- Pertaining to a function
or feature of a display station that allows multiple work stations to be attached
to one cable path.
-
CA certificate
- See certificate authority certificate.
-
cache line
- A record that contains
relevant information about the user data that is currently in the subsystem
cache memory. Examples of this information include the current state of the
data and the intended location of the data on one or more disks.
-
cache timeout
- The length of time
that is allowed to pass before the cache is updated.
-
CA key
- See command attention key.
-
calculation specification
- In RPG,
a specification on which the programmer describes the processing to be done
by the program.
-
calibration
- In capacity planning,
the process of refining a model so that it represents the system the user
is modeling. The predicted and measured values should match as closely as
possible, with no more than a 10% difference for resource utilization, and
no more than a 20% difference for response times.
-
call
- (1) In telephony, a physical or
logical connection (association) between one or more parties in a telephone
call. For example, a held call has two parties logically connected although
they are physically disconnected.
- (2) To start a program or procedure,
usually by specifying the entry conditions and jumping to an entry point.
- (3) To transfer control to a procedure, program, routine, or subroutine.
-
callable interface (CI)
- (1) In query
management, the Common Programming Interface (CPI) that includes the definitions
of the control blocks and constants used for the interface.
- (2) The
name of the interface program, the definition of the arguments passed to the
interface program, and the definition of the data structures passed to the
interface program.
-
callable service
- A program service
provided through the programming interface. See also action service.
-
call control
- That set of telephony
functions that includes call establishment, call transfer, and call disconnection
(the program control of a telephone call).
-
call detail record (CDR)
- In telephony,
a unit of information containing data about a completed call, such as the
time the call began, its duration and date, the originating extension, and
the number called.
-
called number
- See dialed number identification service.
-
called party
- See dialed number identification service.
-
called program
- A program that is
the object of a CALL statement combined at run time with the calling program
to produce a run unit.
-
caller
- The requester of a service.
-
calling program
- A program that calls
another program.
-
call level
- The position of an entry
(program or procedure) in the call stack. The first entry has a call level
of 1. Any entry called by a level 1 entry has a call level of 2, and so on.
-
call level number
- A unique number
assigned by the system to each call stack entry.
-
call message queue
- A message queue
that exists for each call stack entry within a job.
-
call profile
- In telephony, a set
of characteristics that may be used when establishing or manipulating a program-controlled
telephone call.
-
call stack
- The ordered list of all
programs or procedures currently started for a job. The programs and procedures
can be started explicitly with the CALL instruction, or implicitly from some
other event.
-
call stack entry
- A program or procedure
in the call stack.
-
call user data (CUD)
- User-specified
data that can be placed in an X.25 call request packet to be sent to the adjacent
node.
-
cancellation cleanup handler
- A function
that you can specify to perform an action, such as releasing resources, that
occurs after the thread returns from the start routine and calls pthread_exit()
or after a cancellation request is performed on the thread.
-
cancellation point
- A function that
causes a pending cancellation request to be delivered if the cancellation
state is enabled and the cancellation type is deferred.
-
cancellation state
- One of two values,
which are either enabled or disabled, that describe whether cancellation requests
in the current thread are acted on or held in a pending state. If the value
is enabled, the cancellation request is acted on immediately and is based
on the current cancellation type. If the value is disabled, the cancellation
request is held in a pending state until it is enabled.
-
cancellation type
- One of two values
(deferred or asynchronous) that describe how cancellation requests in the
current thread are acted on when the cancellation state is enabled. If the
value is deferred, the cancellation request is held pending. If the value
is asynchronous, the cancel request is acted on immediately, thus ending the
thread with a status of PTHREAD_CANCELED.
-
capability data
- In OSI, a confirmed
data transfer service provided by the session layer to transfer a limited
amount of data outside of an activity. Capability data can be used by two
peers to exchange information about their capability to start an activity.
-
capacitor
- An electronic part that
permits storage of electricity.
-
capacity planner
- A function that
uses information about the system, such as a description of the system's workload,
performance objectives, and configuration, to determine how the data processing
needs of the system can best be met. The capacity planner then recommends,
through the use of printed reports and graphs, ways to enhance performance,
such as hardware upgrades, performance tuning, or system configuration changes.
-
capacity planning
- The process of
determining the hardware and software configuration required to accommodate
the anticipated workload on a system.
-
card
- An electronic circuit board
that is plugged into a slot in a system unit to give it added capabilities.
-
card enclosure
- The area in the system
unit that contains the logic cards.
-
card type
- A 4-digit identifier printed
on the logic card.
-
carriage control character
- The first
character of an output record (line) that is to be printed; it determines
the movement before or after the next line is printed (write, space, or skip).
See also control character.
-
carrier
- A continuous frequency (a
pulse train, or an electric or electromagnetic wave) that may be varied by
a signal bearing information to be transmitted over a communication system.
-
Carrier Sense Multiple Access with Collision
Detection (CSMA/CD)
- A media access method that monitors another
station's transmissions. If the data station detects another signal during
transmission, it stops transmitting, sends a jam signal, then waits for a
variable time before trying again.
-
cascaded initiator
- An intermediate
node in a transaction program network that uses the two-phase commit protocol.
-
cascaded menu
- A menu that appears
from, and contains choices related to, a cascading choice in another menu.
-
cascading choice
- A choice on a menu
that, when selected, presents another menu with additional related choices.
-
cast
- In programming languages, an
expression that converts the value of its operand to a specified type.
-
catalog view
- (1) In DB2® UDB for iSeries™, one of the views contained in a UDB for iSeries SQL catalog.
- (2) In DB2 UDB for iSeries, one of a set of views containing information about the objects in
a collection, such as tables, views, indexes, columns, packages, and constraints.
-
catch-up
- In a remote journal network,
the process of replicating journal entries that existed in the journal receivers
of the source journal before the remote journal was activated.
-
CBC
- See cipher
block chaining.
-
CBJ
- See Class
Broker for Java™.
-
CBX
- See computerized
branch exchange.
-
cc
- See control
character.
-
CCA
- See Common
Cryptographic Architecture.
-
CCB
- See command
control block.
-
CCS
- See Common
Communications Support.
-
CCSID
- See coded character set identifier.
-
CCSID 65534
- See coded character set identifier 65534.
-
CCSID 65535
- See coded character set identifier 65535.
-
CD
- See compact
disc.
-
CDR
- See call
detail record.
-
CD-R
- See compact
disc - recordable.
-
CDRA
- See Character
Data Representation Architecture.
-
CD-ROM
- See compact-disc read-only memory.
-
CDS clerk
- The software that provides
an interface between client applications and CDS servers.
-
CE area
- The name of a reserved area
on disk used for analyzing hardware.
-
Celsius
- Pertaining to a thermometric
scale at which water boils at 100 degrees and freezes at 0 degrees in standard
atmospheric pressure.
-
centralized directory service
- In
OSI, a method of organizing directory services so that one node provides directory
service for other nodes. OSI Communications Subsystem supports only centralized
directory service.
-
centralized processing
- In CICS®, processing
in which the application is processed on a central processor, which users
access using a terminal.
-
central office (CO)
- A telephone switching
system that connects customer-premise business and subscriber lines to other
customer lines or trunks, both locally or remotely. A central office is located
on the edge of the telephone service provider's network, rather than on a
customer's premises.
-
central site
- In a network of servers,
the server licensed to receive program temporary fixes (PTFs) and distribution
media from IBM®. This system is also used to provide problem handling support to
other systems in a network. In a distributed data processing network, the
central site is usually defined as the focal point in a communications network
for alerts, application design, and remote system management tasks such as
problem management.
-
central system
- A single server that
handles all of the communications to an endpoint system.
-
certificate
- In computer security,
a digital document that binds a public key to the identity of the certificate
owner, thereby enabling the certificate owner to be authenticated. A certificate
is issued by a certificate authority.
-
certificate authority (CA)
- An organization
that issues certificates. The CA authenticates the certificate owner's identity
and the services that the owner is authorized to use, issues new certificates,
renews existing certificates, and revokes certificates.
-
certificate authority certificate (CA certificate)
- In computer security, a digital document that identifies an organization
that issues certificates.
-
CFIOP
- See combined function IOP.
-
CF key
- See command function key.
-
CGI
- See Common
Gateway Interface.
-
CGI program
- A program that runs on
a Web server and uses the common gateway interface (CGI) to perform tasks
that are not usually done by the server, such as database access and form
processing. The i5/OS™ operating system supports compiled CGI programs that
are written in ILE C, ILE RPG, and ILE COBOL languages.
-
CGI script
- A computer program that
runs on a Web server and uses the Common Gateway Interface (CGI) to perform
tasks that are not usually done by a Web server (for example, database access
and form processing). A CGI script is a CGI program that is written in a scripting
language such as Perl.
-
CGU
- See character
generator utility.
-
chain
- (1) A group of logically linked
records that are transferred over a communications line.
- (2) In DFU,
a way to change from one display format to another after the user signals
that the first display format was completed.
- (3) In RPG, an operation
code that reads input records identified by specified relative record numbers
or keys.
-
chaining
- A method of storing records
in which each record belongs to a list or group of records and has a linking
field for tracing the chain.
-
Challenge Handshake Authentication Protocol (CHAP)
- An authentication protocol that protects against eavesdropping
by encrypting the user name and password. See also Password Authentication Protocol.
-
change authority
- An object authority
that allows a user to perform all operations on the object except those limited
to the owner or controlled by object existence authority, object management
authority, object alter authority, and object reference authority. The user
can add, change, and delete entries in an object, or read the contents of
an entry in the object. Change authority combines object operational authority
and all the data authorities.
-
change bar
- A character used in the
left margin to indicate that a document line is changed.
-
change-direction protocol
- In SNA,
a data flow control protocol in which the sending logical unit (LU) stops
sending normal-flow requests, signals this fact to the receiving LU using
the change-direction indicator (in the request header of the last request
of the last chain), and prepares to receive requests.
-
changed subfile record
- A subfile
record into which the work station user has entered data, or a subfile record
for which a write or change operation was issued with the DDS keyword SFLNXTCHG
or DSPATR(MDT) in effect.
-
change log
- For directory shadowing,
a record of changes made to directory entries, departments, and locations
for the purpose of sending only the updates and not the entire directory to
collecting systems.
-
change management
- The process of
planning (for example, scheduling) and controlling (for example, distributing,
installing, and tracking) software changes over a network.
-
change request (CRQ)
- In System Manager,
an instance of a change request description that has been submitted to run
or is running. A change request is uniquely identified by the change request
name and a sequence number.
-
change request description (CRQD)
- An i5/OS object that describes a change to be made to the computing environment.
The object, which is maintained only at the central site server or servers,
consists of a list of activities that describe the steps needed to make the
change.
-
channel code
- A number from 1 to 12
that identifies a position in a forms-control buffer or a page definition.
-
channel service unit (CSU)
- An American
Telephone and Telegraph (AT&T) unit that is part of the AT&T nonswitched
digital data system.
-
CHAP
- See Challenge
Handshake Authentication Protocol.
-
character
- Any symbol that can be
entered on a keyboard, printed, or displayed. For example, letters, numbers,
and punctuation marks are all characters.
-
character array
- A named list or table
of character data.
-
character cell
- In the GDDM® function, the
imaginary box whose boundaries govern the size, orientation, and spacing of
individual characters to be displayed on a work station.
-
character code
- In iSeries Access, an
ASCII or EBCDIC value assigned to the symbols or functions that are used by
a computer.
-
character constant
- (1) The actual character
value (a symbol, quantity, or constant) in a source program that is itself
data, instead of reference to a field that contains the data. See also numeric constant.
- (2) In the C language, a
character or an escape sequence enclosed in quotation marks.
-
character conversion
- The process
of changing data from one character coding representation to another.
-
Character Data Representation Architecture (CDRA)
- An IBM architecture that defines a set of identifiers, resources,
services, and conventions to achieve consistent representation, processing,
and interchange of graphic character data in heterogeneous environments.
-
character data representation identifier
- A tag that is used to achieve data integrity. The Character Data Representation
Architecture specifies that you should tag all character data as it flows
through the system. You can tag using a short-form or a long-form identifier.
A coded character set identifier (CCSID) is an example of a character data
representation identifier.
-
character expression
- A character
constant, a simple character variable, an element of a character array, a
character-valued function reference, a substring reference, or a sequence
of the above separated by the concatenation operator and parentheses.
-
character field
- An area that is reserved
for information that can contain any of the characters in the character set.
See also numeric field.
-
character format
- In REXX, a format
that is used in the REXX conversion functions to indicate that data is in
a textual form as opposed to machine-readable form.
-
character generator utility (CGU)
- A function of the Application Development ToolSet licensed program that is
used to define and maintain user-defined double-byte characters and related
sort information.
-
character grid
- In Business Graphics
Utility, an invisible network of uniformly spaced horizontal and vertical
lines covering the chart area. Used by the Business Graphics Utility to determine
the physical dimensions of the chart and the placement of the data on it.
-
character grid unit
- In Business Graphics
Utility, the distance between two adjacent horizontal or vertical lines on
a character grid.
-
character ID
- See character identifier.
-
character identifier (character ID)
- (1) The standard identifier for a character, regardless of its style. For example,
all uppercase A's have the same character identifier.
- (2) On a server,
a 4-byte binary value. The value is a concatenation of the graphic character
set global identifier followed by the code page global identifier. For example,
the character identifier for German (feature 2929) is 00697 00273.
-
character key
- A keyboard key that
allows the user to type into the system the character shown on the key. See
also function key.
-
character large object (CLOB)
- A character
string that contains single-byte characters with an associated code page.
-
character operator
- A symbol representing
an operation to be performed on character data, such as concatenation (joining
the data or fields) in the control language (CL).
-
character printer
- A device that prints
a single character at a time. (T) (A) See also line
printer.
-
character set
- (1) A defined set of characters
with no coded representation assumed. A character set may be defined by alphabet,
by language, by script, or any combination of these definitions. A character
set is not, however, the same as a display font or printer font.
- (2) A defined set of characters that can be recognized by a configured hardware
or software system.
-
character set identifier 65534
- The
character set identifier (CCSID) that is used to show that a CCSID value for
data at this level of processing is not relevant. When CCSID 65534 (FFFE )
is associated with data, a CCSID value for the data should be obtained from
the tagged fields of elements that are at a lower level in the defined hierarchy.
For example, a file has CCSIDs tagged for each individual field it contains.
If the file is tagged with CCSID 65534, processing is based on the CCSIDs
assigned to each individual field instead of the CCSID assigned to the file.
-
character set identifier 65535
- The
character set identifier (CCSID) that is used to show that data associated
with the CCSID should not be processed as coded-graphic-character data.
-
characters per inch (cpi)
- The number
of characters printed horizontally within an inch across a page.
-
character string
- A sequence of consecutive
characters that are treated as a unit.
-
character variable
- (1) In the C language,
a data object whose value can be changed while a program is running and whose
data type is a signed or unsigned character.
- (2) Character data whose
value is assigned or changed while the program is running.
-
chart
- A picture defined in terms
of graphics primitives and graphics attributes.
-
chart area
- In the GDDM function, the
part of the picture space in which a business chart is to be drawn.
-
chart format
- In Business Graphics
Utility, an object containing chart characteristics, such as the chart type,
chart heading, legend position, and so on. The chart format does not include
the data values to be plotted. The system-recognized identifier for the object
type is *CHTFMT.
-
chart layout
- In Business Graphics
Utility, the arrangement of the various parts in the chart area and surrounding
margins.
-
CHASE
- In SNA, a command used by the
host system to determine when the secondary logical unit has finished processing
all previously sent response units.
-
check box
- A square box with associated
text that represents a choice. When a user selects the choice, the check box
is filled to indicate that the choice is selected. The user can clear the
check box by selecting the choice again, thereby deselecting the choice.
-
check constraint
- In DB2 UDB for iSeries, a rule that limits the values allowed in a column or group of columns.
A check constraint can be defined for either a table or a file.
-
check digit
- The far right number
of a self-check field used to verify the accuracy of the field.
-
check in
- In the Application Development
Manager feature of the Application Development ToolSet licensed program, to
release the access key for a part so other users can change the part.
-
check out
- In the Application Development
Manager feature of the Application Development ToolSet licensed program, to
copy a part to a specific development group, if it is not there already, and
to set the access key for the part so no other application developer can change
it.
-
check pending
- A state that occurs
on i5/OS when data for a constraint for a database file cannot be verified
as valid. A constraint could be either a referential constraint or a check
constraint.
-
checkpoint
- A place in a program at
which a check is made, or at which a recording of data is made to allow the
program to be restarted in case of interruption.
-
checkpoint size
- In OSI X.400, the
maximum amount of data (in units of 1024 bytes) that can be sent between two
minor synchronization points. The checkpoint size is used by the X.400 reliable
transfer server.
-
checksum
- In error detection, a value
that is produced by accumulating a quantity of data. The checksum and the
accumulated data are sent together so that the receiver can verify the integrity
of the data by regenerating the checksum and comparing it to the previously
generated checksum.
-
checksum protection
- (1) In TCP/IP, the
sum of a group of data associated with the group and used for error checking
purposes.
- (2) A function that protects data stored in an auxiliary
storage pool from being lost because of the failure of a single disk. When
checksum protection is in effect and a disk failure occurs, the system automatically
reconstructs the data when the system program is loaded after the device is
repaired. See also device parity protection, mirrored protection.
-
checksum set
- Units of auxiliary storage
defined in groups to provide a way for the system to recover data if a disk
failure occurs when checksum protection is in effect.
-
child class
- A class that inherits
instance methods, attributes, and instance variables directly from the parent
class (also known as the base class or superclass), or indirectly from an
ancestor class.
-
child process
- A process that is created
by a parent process and that shares the resources of the parent process to
carry out a request.
-
child window
- A window that appears
within the border of its parent window (either a primary window or another
child window). When the parent window is resized, moved, or destroyed, the
child window also is resized, moved, or destroyed. However, the child window
can be moved or resized independently from the parent window, within the boundaries
of the parent window.
-
CI
- See callable
interface.
-
CICS (Customer Information Control System)
- An IBM licensed program that provides online transaction-processing
services and management for business applications.
-
CICS group
- An i5/OS library containing
the CICS resource definition for CICS tables.
-
CICS-value data area (CVDA)
- CICS-supplied
values to certain data options on EXEC CICS commands. See the CICS System Programming
Reference manual for more information.
-
CIDR
- See Classless
Inter-Domain Routing.
-
CIM
- See Common
Information Model.
-
C interface
- The interface that is
defined at a level that depends on the variant of C standardized by ANSI.
-
CIP
- See commit
in progress.
-
cipher block chaining (CBC)
- In Cryptographic
Support, a method of reducing repetitive patterns in ciphertext by performing
an exclusive-OR operation on each 8-byte block of data, with the previously
encrypted 8-byte block before it is encrypted.
-
ciphertext
- Data that has been encrypted.
Ciphertext is unreadable until it has been converted into plaintext (decrypted)
with a key. See also plaintext.
-
circuit breaker
- A switch that automatically
interrupts an electric circuit because of an abnormal condition.
-
CISC
- See complex
instruction set computer.
-
CL
- See control
language.
-
C language
- A language used to develop
application programs in compact, efficient code that can be run on different
types of computers with minimal change.
-
class
- (1) In object-oriented design or
programming, a model or template that can be used to create objects with a
common definition and common properties, operations, and behavior. An object
is an instance of a class.
- (2) An object that contains specifications,
such as priority, maximum processing time, and maximum storage, to control
the run-time environment of a job. The system-recognized identifier for the
object type is *CLS.
-
class 0
- See transport class 0.
-
class 2
- See transport class 2.
-
class 4
- See transport class 4.
-
class attribute
- A value in a class
object that controls the processing of routing steps in a job. These values
include the run priority, time slice, eligibility for purge, default wait
time, maximum processing unit time, and maximum temporary storage parameters.
-
class binding signature
- A hexadecimal
value that contains the class signature (obtained from the signature bank)
and the inheritance level. The class binding signature is added to the Interface
Definition Language (IDL) source file by the signature emitter.
-
Class Broker for Java (CBJ)
- A Java tool
that allows Java applications to run on a host system that does
not have a graphical user interface (GUI). Because the iSeries Developer
Kit for Java Remote Abstract Window Toolkit is not recommended
for complex graphics or highly interactive operations, you can use CBJ for
high-performance GUI services.
-
class condition
- In COBOL, a condition
that specifies the character content of a data item as all alphabetic or all
numeric.
-
class file
- A compiled Java source
file.
-
classifier
- In QoS, a control function
that selects packets according to the content within the packet headers.
-
Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR)
- A method for adding class C Internet Protocol (IP) addresses. The addresses
are given to Internet Service Providers (ISPs) for use by their customers.
CIDR addresses reduce the size of routing tables and make more IP addresses
available within organizations.
-
class mask
- A network mask that is
derived solely on the basis of the network class of an Internet Protocol (IP)
address.
-
class method
- (1) In Java,
a method that is called without referring to a particular object. Class methods
affect the class as a whole, not a particular instance of the class. Class
method is also known as static method. See also instance
method.
- (2) A method that creates class instances.
-
class-name
- In COBOL, a user-defined
word defined in the SPECIAL-NAMES paragraph of the Environment Division that
assigns a name to the proposition, for which a truth value can be defined,
to verify that the content of a data item consists exclusively of those characters
listed in the definition of the class-name.
-
class object
- An object that identifies
the run attributes of a job. The system-recognized identifier for the object
type is *CLS.
-
class of service
- A set of link and
node characteristics, associated with a session or a set of sessions, that
determine the route that is selected for the sessions through an APPN network.
-
class-of-service description
- A system
object created for Advanced Peer-to-Peer Networking® (APPN) support
that provides the information required to assign relative priority to the
transmission groups and intermediate routing nodes for an APPN session. The
system-recognized identifier for the object type is *COSD.
-
CLASSPATH
- In the execution environment,
an environment variable keyword that specifies the directories in which to
look for class and resource files. See also class path.
-
class path
- A list of directories
and JAR files that contain resource files or Java classes that a program can load dynamically
at run time. See also CLASSPATH.
-
class signature
- A hexadecimal value
obtained from a server and placed in a signature bank on the workstation.
The signature bank uniquely identifies an Interface Definition Language (IDL)
interface. Class signatures are added to the IDL source file by the signature
emitter.
-
clause
- (1) The fundamental grouping of
REXX syntax. A clause is composed of zero or more blanks, a sequence of tokens,
zero or more blanks, and the semicolon delimiter.
- (2) In SQL, a distinct
part of a statement in the language structure, such as a SELECT clause or
a WHERE clause.
- (3) A set of consecutive character strings that specify
a characteristic of an entry. There are three types of clauses: data, environment,
and file.
-
cleanup interval
- The length of time
to wait before removing obsolete data.
-
click
- To press and release a mouse
button without moving the pointer off the choice.
-
client
- A system or process that is
dependent on another system or process (usually called the server) to provide
it with access to data, services, programs, or resources. See also server, host.
-
client application
- A Microsoft® Windows® application that makes dynamic data exchange (DDE) requests.
Any Windows application that supports DDE can be a client application as
long as a host server has been created to handle requests from the client
application.
-
client/server
- Pertaining to the model
of interaction in distributed data processing in which a program on one computer
sends a request to a program on another computer and awaits a response. The
requesting program is called a client; the answering program is called a server.
See also distributed application.
-
clipboard
- An area of computer memory,
or storage, that temporarily holds data. Data in the clipboard is available
to other applications.
-
clipping
- In the GDDM function, the
process of cutting off the image at the border of the display but allowing
the coordinates of the lines to extend beyond.
-
CLNP
- See connectionless-mode
network protocol.
-
CLNS
- See connectionless-mode
network service.
-
CLNS path
- In OSI, a path used when
the connectionless-mode network service is used. Each CLNS path names data
terminal equipment (DTE) to be used for outbound communication.
-
CLNS path maintenance
- In OSI, an
option of whether or not to maintain a CLNS path to an adjacent node permanently
(until OSI Communications Subsystem is restarted), or release the path when
no active CLNS connection uses it. These connections include both network
management and directory service connections and connections between customer
programs.
-
CLNS path set
- In OSI, a path set
used when the connectionless-mode network service is used.
-
CLOB
- See character
large object.
-
clocking
- In communications, a method
of controlling the number of data bits sent on a communications line in a
specified time.
-
close
- To end the connection between
a file and a program, and to end the processing.
-
closed user group (CUG)
- In data communication,
a group of users who can communicate with other users in the group, but not
with users outside the group. A data terminal equipment (DTE) may belong to
more than one closed user group.
-
closure line
- In the GDDM function, a
line added by the system to enclose an area being filled with a pattern, in
instances when the routines that precede the GSENDA routine fail to form an
enclosed area.
-
CL program
- See control language program.
-
cluster
- (1) A collection of complete
systems that work together to provide a single, unified computing capability.
- (2) In SNA, a group of stations that consist of a controller (cluster
controller) and the workstations attached to it. Examples are local area
networks and host attached workstations.
-
Cluster feature
- A feature that provides
four cable connections and allows up to four work stations to be attached
to a 5251 Model 12 Display Station.
-
cluster formation
- The process whereby
the first node of a cluster to install the Cluster service attempts to gain
control of the quorum resource and forms a cluster by creating cluster recovery
databases. Windows 2000 Advanced server allows for two-node clusters
while Windows .NET Enterprise Server allows for four-node
clusters.
-
clustering
- The ability to group independent
systems to work together as a single system.
-
cluster joining
- The process whereby
additional nodes join an existing cluster when they can communicate with another
active clustered node and can validate the node name and version compatibility.
-
cluster membership list
- A set of
cluster nodes that have been configured for a cluster.
-
cluster node
- A system that is a member
of a cluster. See also system.
-
ClusterProven®
- An IBM designation
that defines certain high-availability requirements that are applied to a
software product either by itself or in combination with other software products.
A solution that satisfies the technical criteria of these requirements can
be validated with IBM and licensed to be marketed with IBM's ClusterProven trademark.
-
cluster resource
- Any part of the
system that is available across multiple cluster nodes. The two types of system
resources that can be resilient are the following: Objects that are kept up
to date by using replication. A resilient application and its associated IP
address, which can be switched.
-
cluster resource group (CRG)
- A collection
of related cluster resources that defines actions to be taken during a switchover
or failover operation of the access point of resilient resources. The group
describes a recovery domain and supplies the name of the cluster resource
group exit program that manages the movement of an access point.
-
cluster resource group manager (CRGM)
- A highly available client server application that uses the integrated
cluster resource services to configure, define, monitor, and administer a
cluster of systems.
-
cluster resource service
- An i5/OS system service
function that supports cluster implementations.
-
cluster service
- A Windows (TM)
service that manages the cluster specific activities and is installed on each
node of the cluster. The components of the Cluster service provide high availability,
easy management and enhanced scalability for Windows.
-
CL variable
- See control language variable.
-
CMC
- See Common
Messaging Call.
-
CMIP
- See Common
Management Information Protocol.
-
CMIS
- See common
management information service.
-
CMS
- See Conversational
Monitor System.
-
CMT
- See committed.
-
CO
- See central
office.
-
coaxial cable
- A cable consisting
of one conductor, usually a small copper wire, within and insulated from another
conductor of larger diameter, usually copper tubing or copper braid.
-
COBOL
- See Common Business Oriented Language.
-
COBOL character
- Any of the 51 characters
of the COBOL character set.
-
COBOL word
- In COBOL, a character
string of not more than 30 characters that forms a user-defined word, a system-name,
or a reserved word.
-
codec (COder-DECoder)
- An electronic
circuit that converts voice or video into digital code, or that converts digital
code into voice or video.
-
coded character set identifier (CCSID)
- A 16-bit number that includes a specific set of encoding scheme identifiers,
character set identifiers, code page identifiers, and other information that
uniquely identifies the coded graphic-character representation. See also binary string.
-
coded character set identifier 65534 (CCSID 65534)
- The coded character set identifier (CCSID) that is used to show
that a CCSID value for data at this level of processing is not relevant. When
CCSID 65534 (X'FFFE') is associated with data, a CCSID value for the data
should be obtained from the tagged fields of elements that are at a lower
level in the defined hierarchy. For example, a file has CCSIDs that are tagged
for each individual field it contains. If the field is tagged with CCSID 65534,
processing is based on the CCSIDs assigned to each individual field instead
of the CCSID assigned to the file.
-
coded character set identifier 65535 (CCSID 65535)
- An identifier that is used to show that the associated data should
not be processed as coded-graphic-character data. CCSID 65535 (FFFF ) cannot
be represented in long form. Data that is associated with CCSID 65535 should
be interpreted as actual representation is unknown as defined in Character
Data Representation Architecture-Level 2, IBM Registry™. You cannot convert data that
is associated with CCSID 65535 from one CCSID to another. The coded character
set identifier (CCSID) that is used to show that data associated with the
CCSID should not be processed as coded-graphic-character data.
-
coded font
- In AFP™ support, a font
file that associates a code page and a font character set. For double-byte
fonts, a coded font associates multiple pairs of code pages and font character
sets.
-
coded graphic character-set ID
- A
10-digit identifier (two 5-digit identifiers separated by a space) that is
the combination of a graphic character-set ID and a code-page ID. See also code-page ID.
-
code load
- In System Manager, the
type of product load that contains all of the product code that does not require
translation to other languages, such as the code for displays, menus, and
messages. However, if a product is never going to be translated, the code
may contain all the product code.
-
code page
- A particular assignment
of code points to graphic characters. Within a given code page, a code point
can have only one specific meaning. A code page also identifies how undefined
code points are handled.
-
code page global identifier (CPGID)
- A 5-digit decimal or 2-byte binary identifier that is assigned to a code page.
The range of values is 00001 to 65534 (X'0001' to X'FFFE').
-
code-page ID
- A 5-digit registered
identifier used to specify a particular assignment of code points to graphic
characters. The code-page ID is the second part of the QCHRID system value
or the CHRID parameter value. See also coded graphic
character-set ID.
-
code point
- (1) For SNA alerts, a 1-or
2-byte hexadecimal code that designates a particular piece of text to be displayed
at the focal point.
- (2) A unique bit pattern that represents a character
in a code page.
- (3) One of the bit patterns assigned to a character
in a character set. A code point is represented by a hexadecimal number.
For example, in code page 256 (EBCDIC), the letter "e" is assigned a code
point of hex 85.
- (4) In QoS, pertaining to a specific value in the
Differentiated Services field of a data packet that signals to a network the
behavior that is assigned to that packet.
-
COder-DECoder
- See codec.
-
coexistence
- The ability of two or
more entities to function in the same system or network.
-
coherency check
- Verification that
the current state of an object satisfies the programmer-defined invariant
properties of its class.
-
coherent
- Pertaining to an object
in which all data values satisfy the invariant properties. If any invariant
property is not satisfied, the object is not coherent.
-
cold start
- (1) In CICS, a method of
recovering temporary storage and transient data queues when a CICS control region
is started. Temporary storage and transient data queues are cleared with a
cold start.
- (2) A process in which all noninstalled objects created
by the system, such as the internal job table, job message queues, jobs on
job queues, or spooled files on output queues, are deleted as a group and
re-created if appropriate.
-
collate
- To combine and arrange in
order.
-
collating sequence
- The sequence in
which the characters are ordered for the purpose of sorting, merging, comparing,
and processing indexed data sequentially.
-
collator
- A device that combines and
arranges pages in order.
-
collection
- (1) Data obtained by a collector
that represents the system status at a given point in time. Collections are
timestamped and stored in a management collection object.
- (2) A set
of objects created by DB2 UDB for iSeries SQL that consists of, and logically
classifies, a set of objects, such as tables, views, and indexes. A DB2 UDB for iSeries SQL collection consists of a library; catalog views that contain descriptions
and information for all tables, views, indexes, files, packages, and constraints
created in the library; a journal and journal receiver that are used to record
changes on all tables created in the collection; and, optionally, a data dictionary.
-
Collection Services
- An iSeries Navigator
tool that collects performance data independent of the iSeries Navigator
system monitors. This function is intended for subsequent analysis by performance
personnel either by writing queries against the collected data or by reviewing
reports produced by the Performance Tools for iSeries licensed program.
-
collector
- A generic name for a program
that at regular intervals collects data about the status of the system.
-
collector system
- For directory shadowing,
a system that receives initial or changed Enterprise Address Book (EAB) data
from a supplier system in a network. See also supplier
system.
-
collision
- An unwanted condition that
results from concurrent transmissions on a channel, causing the transmissions
to be unintelligible.
-
collision detect
- In Performance Tools,
a counter that counts the total number of times the terminal equipment (TE)
detected that the frames it transmitted were damaged by another TE trying
to use the same bus.
-
color
- In computer systems, a color
is usually represented by a triplet called RGB (red, green, and blue) signals.
Most computer monitors require RGB signals to drive the 3-colored phosphors
of a color monitor.
-
color palette
- (1) A set of colors that
can be displayed on the display at one time. This can be standard set used
for all images or a set that can be customized for each image.
- (2) In Business Graphics Utility, the range of colors defined by hue, lightness,
and saturation to be used when a chart is displayed on a graphics-capable
display.
-
column
- (1) In relational database, a
field defined for a given record.
- (2) In DB2 UDB for iSeries, the vertical part of a table. A column
has a name and a particular data type (for example, character, decimal, or
integer).
- (3) A character position within a print line or on a display.
The positions are numbered consecutively from 1, starting at the leftmost
character position and extending to the rightmost position.
-
column function
- In SQL, a process
that calculates a value from a set of values and expresses it as a function
name followed by an argument enclosed in parentheses.
-
column separator
- A symbol on each
side of a position of a field on a display. This symbol does not occupy a
position on the display.
-
combined alert
- In the NetView® program,
an alert that includes both a nongeneric alert and a generic alert in one
network management vector transport.
-
combined condition
- In COBOL, a condition
that is the result of connecting two or more conditions with the AND or the
OR logical operator.
-
combined file
- In RPG, a data file
that is used as both an input file and an output file. The fields are not
necessarily the same in the input and output records.
-
combined function IOP (CFIOP)
- A type
of IOP that can connect to a variety of different input/output adapters to
support disk units, a console, and communications hardware. It contains some
multifunction IOP (MFIOP) capabilities as well as Ethernet and token-ring
controllers. This processor does not contain server processor functions. See
also multifunction IOP.
-
combined station
- In high-level data
link control (HDLC), the part of a data station that supports the combined
control functions of the data link, generates commands and responses for transmission,
and interprets received commands and responses.
-
comma
- In REXX, a token that represents
the continuation character, a separator of arguments in an argument list,
or a separator in a parsing template.
-
command
- (1) In SNA, any field set in
the transmission header (TH), request header (RH), or request unit (RU) that
states an action or that starts a protocol.
- (2) In SDLC, a frame transmitted
by a primary station. Asynchronous balanced mode stations send both commands
and responses. See also response.
- (3) A
statement used to initiate an action or start a service. A command consists
of the command name abbreviation, and its parameters and flags if applicable.
-
command attention key (CA key)
- In
DDS, a keyboard key that can be specified with the CA keyword to request the
function specified by the keyword. Data is not returned to the system. See
also command function key.
-
command control block (CCB)
- In the IBM Token-Ring
Network, a specifically formatted block of information provided from the application
program to the adapter support software to request an operation.
-
command definition
- An object that
contains the definition of a command (including the command name, parameter
descriptions, and validity-checking information) and identifies the program
that performs the function requested by the command. The system-recognized
identifier for the object type is *CMD.
-
command definition statement
- A source
statement that defines keywords and parameter values, qualified names, elements
in a list, parameter requirements and interrelationships, and prompt text
for a command. Command definition statements are used to create a CL command.
-
command file
- (1) In RJE, a remote job
input stream that can contain host system commands and job control language
(JCL), data, and RJE control statements (READFILE or EOF). See also data file.
- (2) In PC operating systems, a file with a file name
extension of .CMD that functions like a batch file in DOS.
-
command function key (CF key)
- In
DDS, a keyboard key that can be specified with the CF keyword to request the
function specified by the keyword. Data is returned to the system. See also command attention key.
-
command key indicator
- In RPG, an
indicator defined to correspond with the function keys to tell the program
when one of the function keys is pressed.
-
command length
- In query management,
one of the arguments passed to the language-specific interface programs that
specifies the length of the query command to be run.
-
command level
- Pertaining to an operation
that is performed for a specific command in a program. For example, a Monitor
Message (MONMSG) command that immediately follows a specific command in a
CL program is a command-level MONMSG command. See also program level.
-
command line
- The blank line on a
display where commands, option numbers, or selections can be entered.
-
command name
- The first term in a
command, a verb that specifies the action to be performed, usually followed
by operands.
-
command processing program (CPP)
- A program that processes a command. This program performs some validity checking
and processes the command so that the requested function is performed.
-
command prompt
- A displayed character
(or string of characters) that indicates that a user may enter a command to
be processed.
-
command string
- In query management,
a character string that contains a query command.
-
COMMAREA
- See communication area.
-
comment
- Source program information
that is not translated by the compiler.
-
comment-entry
- In COBOL, an entry
in the Identification Division of the source program that may be any combination
of characters from the character set of the computer. The comment-entry is
written in area B on one or more lines. Comment-entries serve only as documentation
and are not translated by the compiler.
-
comment line
- In COBOL, a source program
line represented by an asterisk (*) in the indicator area of the line and
any characters from the computer's character set in area A and area B of that
line. The comment line serves only for documentation in a program.
-
commercial processing workload (CPW)
- An application that is run on iSeries models and processors to determine
processor performance. The CPW workload is representative of commercial applications,
particularly those that do significant database processing in conjunction
with journaling and commitment control. CPW replaces the term RAMP-C.
-
commit
- To end a unit of work by releasing
locks so that the database changes made by that unit of work can be perceived
by other processes. This operation makes the data changes permanent. See also atomic.
-
commit cycle
- The sequence of changes
made between commitment boundaries.
-
commit cycle identifier
- The journal
sequence number associated with the start commitment operation that is used
to identify the journal entries in a particular commit cycle.
-
commit identifier
- The information
that associates the commit operation with a specific set of committable resource
changes. The commit ID is placed in the notify object if a system or routing
step failure occurs, or if uncommitted changes exist when a routing step ends
normally. The commit ID contains information (supplied on the commit statement)
about the last successful transaction (group of changes that appear as a single
change); for example, the transfer of funds from savings to a checking account.
-
commit in progress (CIP)
- The commit
in progress logical unit of work (LUW) state indicates that all the resources
associated with this logical unit of work have been prepared after a unanimous
vote to commit. The protected resource managers are in the process of committing.
-
commitment boundary
- In a commitment
controlled environment, any time there are no outstanding changes for a committable
resource existing within a job.
-
commitment control
- A means of grouping
committable resource operations to allow either the processing of a group
of committable resource changes as a single unit through the Commit command,
or the removing of a group of committable resource changes as a single unit
through the Rollback command.
-
commitment definition
- Information
used by the system to maintain the commitment control environment throughout
a routing step and, in the case of a system failure, throughout an IPL (initial
program load). This information is obtained from the Start Commitment Control
(STRCMTCTL) command, which establishes the commitment control environment,
and the file open information in a routing step. The commitment definition
has a scope either to the job or to a particular activation group within the
job.
-
commit point
- A point in time when
data is considered to be consistent. See also commit
point, roll back.
-
committable resource
- A local or remote i5/OS object that can be placed under commitment control.
-
committable update
- An operation that
results in a change to an object such that the object is under commitment
control.
-
committed (CMT)
- The committed logical
unit of work (LUW) state indicates that the current LUW is committed. All
agents have committed and returned a reply to this node.
-
Common Business Oriented Language (COBOL)
- A high-level programming language, based on English, that is used primarily
for commercial data processing.
-
common carrier
- In data communications,
any government-regulated company that provides communications services to
the general public. Examples are: the government-regulated telephone and telegraph
companies in the United States, the General Post Office in the United Kingdom,
the Bundespost in Germany, and Nippon Telephone and Telegraph Public Corporation
in Japan.
-
Common Communications Support (CCS)
- The Systems Application Architecture® (SAA®) component that
defines architectures and protocols that interconnect systems and devices
in an SAA environment and allow data to be interchanged among them.
-
Common Cryptographic Architecture (CCA)
- IBM software that enables a consistent approach to cryptography on major IBM computing
platforms. It supports application software that is written in a variety of
programming languages. Application software can call on CCA services to perform
a broad range of cryptographic functions, including DES and RSA encryption.
-
Common Gateway Interface (CGI)
- An
Internet standard for defining scripts that pass information from a Web server
to an application program, through an HTTP request, and vice versa. A CGI
script is a CGI program that is written in a scripting language, such as
Perl.
-
Common Information Model (CIM)
- An
implementation-neutral, object-oriented schema for describing network management
information. The Distributed Management Task Force (DMTF) develops and maintains
CIM specifications.
-
common key
- In COBOL, the key fields
that are common to all record formats in the file starting with the first
key field (the most significant) and ending with the last key field (the least
significant).
-
Common Management Information Protocol (CMIP)
- In OSI, the management protocol (ISO 9596-2) that supports the
common management information service.
-
common management information service (CMIS)
- In OSI, the set of services defined by ISO 9595. The common management
information service is used by agent processes and managing processes to communicate.
-
Common Messaging Call (CMC)
- An application
programming interface (API) defined by the X.400 API Association.
-
Common Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA)
- An architecture and a specification for distributed object-oriented
computing that separates client and server programs with a formal interface
definition.
-
common program
- In COBOL, a program
that, despite being directly contained within another program, can be called
from any program directly or indirectly contained in that other program.
-
Common Programming Interface (CPI)
- In the Systems Application Architecture (SAA) solution, a
set of software interfaces, conventions, languages, and protocols that provide
a framework for writing applications with cross-system consistency.
-
Common Programming Interface for Communications
(CPI-C)
- A call-level interface that provides a consistent application
programming interface for applications that use program-to-program communications.
The interface uses LU 6.2 architecture to create a set of interprogram services
that can establish and end a conversation, send and receive data, exchange
control information, and notify a partner program of errors.
-
Common User Access® (CUA®)
- A Systems Application Architecture (SAA) specification that gives a series of guidelines describing the way
information should be displayed on a screen, and the interaction techniques
between users and computers.
-
common user ID
- See common user identification.
-
common user identification (common user ID)
- In iSeries Access, the user identification of an iSeries Access user
that is used by the router when establishing a communications connection with
a host system if a user ID is not specified in either the CONFIG.PCS file
or in an alternative configuration file. The router uses this common user
ID when connecting the personal computer to each additional host system. See
also user identification.
-
common work area (CWA)
- A work area
that can be accessed by any transaction in the CICS system.
-
communication adapter
- A device which
allows network communication.
-
communication area (COMMAREA)
- A CICS area that is used to pass data between tasks that communicate with a
given terminal. The area can also be used to pass data between programs within
a task.
-
communication port
- (1) On a personal
computer, a serial port to which a stand-alone modem can be attached.
- (2) An access point for data entry or exit to or from a communication device
such as a workstation.
-
communications area
- In query management,
a control block used to communicate between the system code supporting the
Common Programming Interface (CPI) and the application program using the CPI.
-
communications configuration
- The
physical placement of communications controllers, the attachment of communications
lines, and so forth; and the configuration descriptions that describe the
physical configuration to the system and describe how the configuration will
be used by the system.
-
communications controller
- The I/O
processor card in the card enclosure.
-
communications data format
- In RJE,
the output data received from the host system is left the same as it was received
(either compressed, or data cut off at the end, or both).
-
communications job
- A batch job that
is started by a program start request from a remote system.
-
communications line
- The physical
link (such as a wire or a telephone circuit) that connects one or more work
stations to a communications controller, or connects one controller to another.
See also data link protocol.
-
communications security
- A system
option that requires the identity of a remote location to be verified before
that location can run programs on your system.
-
communications side information
- In CPI Communications, an object that contains initialization parameters,
such as the name of the partner program with which a program can establish
a conversation and the name of the logical unit (LU) at the partner program's
node, which CPI Communications requires to establish a conversation. The system-recognized
identifier for the object type is *CSI.
-
communications type
- A method for
application programs to communicate on a local system, or between a local
system and a remote system using the intersystem communications function (ICF).
Examples of these communications methods include (a) asynchronous communications,
(b) binary synchronous communications (BSC), (c) intrasystem communications,
or (d) Systems Network Architecture (SNA), such as advanced program-to-program
communications (APPC) and SNA upline facility (SNUF).
-
Communications Utilities
- The IBM licensed
program that contains the VM/MVS bridge and the remote job entry function.
Communications Utilities provides a method of exchanging mail or files and
submitting or receiving jobs between connected systems.
-
community
- The relationship between
a Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) agent and one or more SNMP managers.
The community describes which SNMP manager requests the SNMP agent should
honor.
-
commutative
- Combining mathematical
elements or having elements that combine in a way that the result is independent
of the order in which they are processed. For example, such that a + b = b
+ a and a x b = b x a.
-
compact
- To replace repetitive bits
in a file or folder with control bits so that the file or folder takes up
less space when saved.
-
compact disc (CD)
- An optically read
disc, typically storing approximately 660 MB.
-
compact-disc read-only memory (CD-ROM)
- High-capacity read-only memory in the form of an optically read compact
disc.
-
compact disc - recordable (CD-R)
- A device that can write data to compact disc recordable (CD-R) discs. A CD-R
then can be read like CD-ROM media.
-
compaction
- See compression.
-
comparison operator
- (1) In REXX, an operator
that compares two terms and returns the value 1 if the result of the comparison
is true, or 0 if it is not true.
- (2) In SQL, a symbol (such as =, <,
>, ) used in comparison expressions to specify a relationship between two
values.
-
compatibility
- Ability to work in
the system or ability to work with other devices or programs.
-
compatible
- Pertaining to the ability
of a device or program to work with another device or program.
-
compilation
- Translation of a source
program (such as RPG or COBOL specifications) into a program in machine language.
In Integrated Language Environment® (ILE) languages, compilation
translates source statements into modules, which then can be bound into programs
or service programs.
-
compilation unit
- A portion of a computer
program sufficiently complete to be compiled correctly.
-
compile
- (1) To translate all or part
of a program expressed in a high-level language into a computer program expressed
in an intermediate language, an assembly language, or a machine language.
- (2) In Integrated Language Environment (ILE) languages, to translate
source statements into modules that then can be bound into programs or service
programs.
-
compiled program
- In the original
program model (OPM), the set of machine-language instructions that is the
output from the compilation of a source program. The actual processing of
data is done by the machine-language program. The system-recognized identifier
for the object type is *PGM.
-
compiler
- A program that translates
a source program into an executable program (an object program).
-
compiler-directing statement
- (1) A statement
that controls what the compiler does rather than what the compiled program
does.
- (2) In RPG, an instruction that controls a compilation listing
or causes records to be inserted. The four compiler directives are /TITLE,
/EJECT, /SPACE, and /COPY.
- (3) In COBOL, a statement, beginning with
a compiler-directing verb, that causes the compiler to take a specific action
during compilation. The compiler-directing statements are the COPY, ENTER,
REPLACE, and USE statements.
-
compiler listing
- A printout that
is produced by compiling a program or creating a file and that optionally
includes, for example, a line-by-line list of the high-level language source,
a cross-reference list, diagnostic information; and for programs, the description
of the externally described files.
-
compile time
- The time period during
which a computer program is being compiled into an executable program.
-
compile-time array
- In RPG, an array
that is compiled with the source program and becomes a permanent part of the
program. See also preruntime array, runtime array.
-
compile-time table
- In RPG, a table
that is built into the source program and that becomes a permanent part of
the compiled program. See also runtime table.
-
complement
- (1) The value that can be
added to the number to equal a given value.
- (2) In Cryptographic Support,
a binary value that, in an exclusive-OR operation with a given binary value
of the same length, produces a binary value of all ones.
-
completion code
- A return code indicating
how a message queue interface (MQI) call has ended.
-
completion message
- A message that
tells the operator when work is successfully ended.
-
complex condition
- In COBOL, a condition
in which one or more logical operators (AND, OR or NOT) act on one or more
conditions. Complex conditions include negated simple conditions, combined
conditions, and negated combined conditions. See also simple condition.
-
complex instruction set computer (CISC)
- A computer that uses the traditional processor architecture to process
instructions. See also reduced instruction set computer.
-
complex number
- A number consisting
of an ordered pair of real numbers, expressible in the form a+bi, where a
and b are real numbers and i squared equals minus one. A complex number is
made up of two parts: a real part and an imaginary part, where a is the value
of the real part and b is the value of the imaginary part and where i is
the square root of -1.
-
compliance type
- In i5/OS licensed management,
the value that determines the action the product must take when the authorized
usage limit is reached or exceeded. The warning compliance type indicates
users are never denied access to a product. The operation action compliance
type means that new users are denied access to the product once the usage
limit is reached, but users that are currently using the product still have
access.
-
component
- In VisualAge® RPG, a
functional grouping of classes and related files within a product.
-
composite bar chart
- In the GDDM function, a
bar chart in which multiple vertical axis values for the same horizontal axis
value are stacked one on top of another. See also floating
bar chart, multiple bar chart.
-
composite bar graph
- In Performance
Tools, a bar graph in which multiple vertical axis values for the same horizontal
axis value are stacked one on top of another. See also floating bar graph.
-
composite key
- (1) An ordered set of key
columns of the same table.
- (2) A key for a file or record format that
is composed of more than one key field.
-
composite part
- In VisualAge RPG, a
collection of controls selected by the user on the GUI designer tool suite
and then placed in the parts palette.
-
composite project
- A container holding
projects or composite projects, or both. Composite projects are used to organize
the projects associated with the software application.
-
compound condition
- In COBOL, a statement
that tests two or more relational expressions. The result can be true or false.
-
compound symbol
- In REXX, a symbol
that permits the substitution of variables within its name, when referred
to. A compound symbol contains at least one period and at least two other
characters. It cannot start with a digit or a period, and if there is only
one period in the compound symbol, it cannot be the last character. The compound
symbol begins with a stem (that part of the symbol up to and including the
first period). The stem is followed by the tail (the parts of the name, delimited
by periods, that are constant symbols, simple symbols, or null). Compound
symbols allow the construction of arrays, associative tables, lists, and so
on.
-
compound variable
- In REXX, a symbol
that contains at least one period, one character before the period, and one
character after the period. A compound variable cannot start with a digit
or period.
-
compress
- To reduce the size of a
set of data, such as a file, in order to save space or transmission time.
-
compressed listing
- In CoOperative
Development Environment/400, a graphical representation of the listing of
the program currently being debugged. See also compressed
source.
-
compressed source
- In CoOperative
Development Environment/400, a graphical representation of the source of the
program currently being debugged. See also compressed
listing.
-
compression
- A function that removes
repetitive characters, spaces, or strings of characters from the data being
processed and replaces the repetitive characters with control characters.
Compression reduces the amount of storage space required for the data.
-
computer graphics
- The use of a computer
to produce visual representations of data, such as charts and multi-dimensional
drawings by means of dots, lines, and curves.
-
computer instruction
- An instruction
that can be recognized by the processing unit of the computer for which it
is designed. See also machine language.
-
computerized branch exchange (CBX)
- An exchange in which a central node acts as a high-speed switch to establish
direct connections between pairs of attached nodes.
-
computer language
- A language that
can be used directly by a computer without intermediate processing. The final
output of the compilation process is a load module containing computer language
instructions. See also computer instruction.
-
computer-name
- In COBOL, a system-name
that identifies the computer on which the program is to be compiled or run.
-
concatenate
- (1) To link together.
- (2) To join two character strings.
-
concatenated field
- Two or more fields
that are combined to make one field in a logical file.
-
concatenation operator
- (1) In REXX, an
operator used to combine two strings into one by adding the second string
to the right end of the first string. The concatenation operators for REXX
are a double vertical bar (which concatenates without a blank) and the blank
(which concatenates with a blank).
- (2) The symbol used to join two
character data items. In CL, for example, the concatenation operator is two
vertical bars (||).
-
concurrency
- The shared use of resources
by multiple interactive users or application processes at the same time.
-
concurrent
- Pertaining to the shared
use of resources by multiple interactive users or application programs at
the same time.
-
concurrent connection limit
- In OSI,
the maximum number of concurrent connections allowed for a given OSI Communications
Subsystem node.
-
concurrent maintenance
- Service that
is performed on a hardware unit while it is operational.
-
condition
- (1) In REXX, a specific event,
or state, that can be trapped by the REXX CALL ON or SIGNAL ON instruction.
- (2) A relational expression that can be evaluated to a value of either
true or false.
- (3) In the Integrated Language Environment (ILE) model, a system-independent representation of an error condition
within a high-level language (HLL). For an i5/OS program, each ILE condition has a corresponding
exception message.
-
conditional expression
- (1) In COBOL,
a simple condition or a complex condition specified in an IF, a PERFORM, or
a SEARCH statement.
- (2) A statement that compares the relationship
(such as greater than or equal) of two items.
-
conditional external reference
- An
external reference that causes automatic linking to be performed.
-
conditional force
- A function that
replaces the specified control field character before the record is sorted
only if the control field in the input record contains a particular entry.
-
conditional loop
- In REXX, a loop
that allows a set of instructions to be repeated either WHILE or UNTIL a specified
condition is met.
-
conditional phrase
- (1) In COBOL, a phrase
that specifies the action to be taken on the determination of the truth value
of a condition resulting from the running of a conditional statement.
- (2) In REXX, a phrase in a DO instruction, introduced by the subkeyword
WHILE or UNTIL, that is used to change the iteration of a repetitive DO loop.
-
conditional prompting
- Pertaining
to prompting that is provided by the system depending on the values selected
by the user for other parameters. See also selective
prompting.
-
conditional statement
- In COBOL, a
statement that controls program flow based on the result of the evaluation
of a condition.
-
conditional variable
- In COBOL, a
data item, one or more values of which has a condition-name assigned to it.
-
conditioning
- The use of indicators
in a program to control when calculations or output operations are done, or
in a file, the use of indicators or condition names to control when certain
functions or operations are done.
-
conditioning indicator
- In RPG, an
indicator used to specify when to do calculations or which characteristics
apply to a record format or field.
-
condition name
- (1) For display files,
a name used to control the selection of DDS keywords and display locations
based on the model of the display station.
- (2) The name assigned to
a status of a user-defined switch.
- (3) In COBOL, a name assigned to
a specific value, set of values, or range of values within the complete set
of values that a conditional variable can have.
-
condition-name condition
- In COBOL,
a statement that the value of a conditional variable is one of a set (or range)
of values assigned to a condition name associated with the conditional variable.
-
condition token
- A 12-byte data structure,
which is consistent across multiple Systems Application Architecture (SAA) participating systems, that allows the application programmer to
associate the condition with the underlying exception message.
-
condition trap
- In REXX, the method
by which the explicit flow of processing in a REXX program can be changed.
Condition traps are enabled or disabled using the ON or OFF subkeywords of
the CALL and SIGNAL instructions.
-
condition variable
- A variable that
acts as a flag that allows a thread to wait for some event to occur. The condition
variable is used with a boolean predicate to indicate the presence or absence
of the event and a mutex that protects both the predicate and the resources
associated with the event. The condition variable has no ownership associated
with it.
-
conduit
- A pipe for protecting electric
wires or cables.
-
confidentiality
- In computer security,
assurance that sensitive information is not visible to an eavesdropper.
-
configuration
- (1) See topology.
- (2) The manner in which the hardware and software of
a system, subsystem, or network are organized and interconnected.
-
configuration file
- (1) In performance,
a file that contains information about a collection as well as certain system
attributes.
- (2) A file that specifies the characteristics of a program,
system device, server or network.
-
configuration list
- A list of local
or remote locations, network addresses, or pass-through device descriptions
used by some types of communications descriptions. The system-recognized identifier
for the object type is *CFGL.
-
configuration management
- The control
of information necessary to identify both physical and logical information
system resources and their relationship to one another.
-
configuration report server (CRS)
- A function that resides on each ring in an environment of multiple token-ring
networks in which configuration is being monitored. This function receives
notifications about inserting and removing stations and notifications about
active monitor failures.
-
Configuration Section
- In COBOL, a
section of the Environment Division of a program, which describes the overall
specifications of the source and object computers.
-
configure
- (1) To describe the interconnected
arrangement of the devices, programs, communications, and optional features
installed on a system.
- (2) To describe setting up auxiliary storage
pools and checksum protection.
-
confirm
- In OSI, a service primitive
issued by a service provider to complete the procedures associated with a
confirmed service.
-
confirmation of delivery
- The automatic
notification to the sender of a message, note, or document as to when action
is taken on the message, note, or document. Confirmation of delivery must
be requested by the sender.
-
confirmed service
- In OSI, a service
that indicates to the sender whether or not data or control information was
properly received. A confirmed service involves a request, indication, response,
and confirm service primitive. See also unconfirmed
service.
-
conform
- To adhere to a prevailing
standard.
-
confounder
- A bit string that is used
to initialize the encryption-block chaining value so that the encrypted result
is different each time a data value is encrypted.
-
connection
- (1) In TCP/IP, the path between
two protocol applications that provides reliable data stream delivery service.
In Internet communications, a connection extends from a TCP application on
one system to a TCP application on another system.
- (2) A combination
of two endpoints that the virtual private network (VPN) protects and a security
policy. Such a connection can exist between any combination of a host and
a gateway.
- (3) In Open Systems Interconnection architecture, an association
established by a given layer between two or more entities of the next higher
layer for the purpose of data transfer.
- (4) In a telephone call, a
logical association between a party and a switch. A call consists of two or
more connections.
-
connection handle
- The identifier
or token by which a program accesses the queue manager to which it is connected.
-
connectionless-mode network protocol (CLNP)
- The OSI protocol defined by ISO 8473. This protocol is used to provide
the connectionless-mode network service (CLNS).
-
connectionless-mode network service (CLNS)
- In OSI, an unacknowledged network service that enables an entity to
send a unit of data from a source service access point to one or more destination
service access points without establishing a connection. The OSI protocol
that provides this service in the Network Layer is defined by ISO 8473 (internet
protocol, or IP).
-
connectionless protocol
- In DCE Remote
Procedure Call, a transport protocol, such as UDP, that does not require a
connection to be established prior to data transfer.
-
connectionless service
- See unacknowledged service. See also acknowledged service.
-
connection list
- A communications
object for ISDN that provides a list of information used to determine when
to accept incoming calls and what information to send with outgoing calls.
The system-recognized identifier for the object type is *CNNL.
-
connection modem
- In Operations Console,
a driver (cwbopaoc.inf file) that allows a console to connect to the server.
-
connection-mode network service
- (1) In OSI, an acknowledged network service that enables an entity to send a unit
of data from a source service access point to a destination service access
point by establishing, maintaining, and disconnecting a connection. The OSI
protocol that provides this service in the network layer is defined by the
X.25 Packet-Level Protocol defined by CCITT 1980 and 1984.
- (2) See connection-oriented network service.
-
connection network
- A switched network
(such as a local area network, X.25, or public-switched dial network) that
allows a local node to establish APPN connections to more than one undefined
adjacent node.
-
connection-oriented network service (CONS)
- A type of networked data communication in which a dedicated connection
between two peer entities is established before data is transferred. A connection-oriented
service consists of three phases: establishment, data transfer, and release.
The two networks exchange address information only while the connection is
being established.
-
connection profile
- A set of data
that is used to establish a connection.
-
connection script
- Data, such as sign-on
and password information, that is exchanged between the host and remote systems
when a connection is established.
-
connective
- In COBOL, a word or a
punctuation character that associates a data name, paragraph name, condition
name, or text name with its qualifier; links two or more values in a series;
or forms a conditional expression.
-
connector
- In a query management command,
the TO word in the EXPORT command, the FROM word in the IMPORT command, or
the AS word in the SAVE DATA command.
-
CONS
- See connection-oriented
network service.
-
consecutive processing
- A method of
processing in which the records in the file are read, written to, or deleted
in the order in which they exist in a file. See also random processing, sequential processing.
-
console
- (1) In COBOL, a function name
associated with the operator's display station.
- (2) In a Windows operating
system environment, any interface with a server.
- (3) A display station
from which an operator can control and observe the system operation. For
example, an operator can install the operating system, do an attended IPL,
or sign on the system after using the End System (ENDSYS) command. The console
is the first workstation that the iSeries server activates in a partition. The
console is always available for use.
-
CONS path
- In OSI, a path that indicates
both quality-of-service values through a network QOS mode and values to indicate
how splitting and multiplexing is to be accomplished. A CONS path can optionally
be reserved for outbound communications to a specific DTE at an adjacent node.
-
CONS path set
- In OSI, a path set
used when the connection-mode network service is used.
-
constant
- (1) Data that has an unchanging,
predefined value to be used in processing. See also variable.
- (2) A language element that specifies an unchanging
value. Constants are classified as string constants or numeric constants.
See also variable.
- (3) In RPG, data that
has an unchanging, predefined value to be used in processing. A constant does
not change during the running of a program, but the contents of a field or
variable can.
-
constant field
- In an externally described
display or printer file, an unnamed field that contains actual data that is
passed to the display or printer but is unknown to the program passing it.
-
constant symbol
- In REXX, a symbol
that starts with a digit (0-9) or a period. The value of a constant symbol
cannot be changed.
-
constraint
- A restriction or limitation
placed on a file.
-
constraint cycle
- A sequence of constraint
relationships in which a descendent of a parent file becomes the parent to
the original parent file.
-
container
- (1) In CoOperative Development
Environment/400, a system object that contains and organizes source files.
An i5/OS library or an MVS-partitioned data set are examples of a container.
- (2) In Backup Recovery and Media Services, the physical object used
to store and move media such as a box, a case, or a rack.
-
container class
- In Backup Recovery
and Media Services, an object that defines the types of physical containers
that are used to store and transport removable media. Container classes are
distinguished by attributes such as capacity and media class.
-
container management
- In Backup Recovery
and Media Services, a function that assigns container classes and tracks containers
by storage location for retention, reuse, and recovery.
-
contention state
- In data communications,
a type of half-duplex line or data link control in which either user may transmit
any time the line or link is available. If both users attempt to transmit
at the same time, the protocols or the hardware determines who goes first.
-
contents view
- A view of an object
that shows the contents of the object in list form. Container views are provided
for containers, and for any object that has container behavior, for example,
a device object such as a printer. Icons view and details view are examples
of contents views.
-
context
- Information about the originator
of a message that is held in fields in the message descriptor. There are two
categories of context information: identity context and origin context. Context
is also known as message context.
-
contiguous item
- In COBOL, an elementary
or group item that is adjacent to another elementary or group item in the
Data Division, contained in the same data hierarchy.
-
continuation character
- (1) In REXX, a
character represented by a comma that lets a clause be extended to more than
one line. This character is functionally replaced by a blank and cannot be
used in the middle of a string or comment.
- (2) A character represented
by a plus sign (+) that lets a command be extended to more than one line.
-
continuation handle
- A value, which
is passed between a high-level language program and a list application programming
interface (API), used to mark the last value put in the user space.
-
continuation line
- (1) An additional line
(or lines) required to continue the coding of a CL command or a DDS keyword
and its value.
- (2) In RLU, a report line or sample line that is part
of a record format or a group of sample lines excluding the first line in
the record format or group of sample lines.
- (3) A line of a source
statement where characters are entered when the source statement cannot be
contained on the previous line or lines.
- (4) In RPG, additional lines
specified on the file description specifications to provide more information
about the file being defined.
-
continued-entry field
- In DDS, a panel
element that contains a field that contains a set of associated entry fields.
-
continuously powered main storage (CPM)
- The function of supplying power only to main storage (cards) for a varied
amount of time (for example, one day) when utility power is lost on servers
that have a system power control network (SPCN).
-
control
- In WebSphere® MQ and VisualAge RPG, the result of selecting a part from the parts palette
and placing it on the design window. An example of a control is an entry field.
-
control block
- A storage area used
by a program to hold control information.
-
control boundary
- A call stack entry
used as the point to which control is transferred when an unmonitored error
occurs or a high-level language termination verb is used. A control boundary
can be either of the following: a) any Integrated Language Environment (ILE) call stack entry for which the immediately preceding call stack
entry is in a different activation group, or b) any ILE call stack entry for
which the immediately preceding call stack entry is an original program model
(OPM) program.
-
control break
- In RPG, a change in
the contents of a control field that indicates all records from a particular
control group were read and a new control group is starting.
-
control character (cc)
- A character
whose occurrence in a particular context initiates, modifies, or stops a control
function. A control character starts, changes, or stops any operation that
affects recording, processing, transmitting, or interpreting data. Examples
are line-feed, shift-in, and shift-out, and, in printing, carriage return,
font change, and end of transmission. See also graphic
character.
-
control field
- (1) In RPG, one or more
fields that are compared from record to record to determine when the information
in the fields changes. When the information changes, the control level indicator
(L1 through L9) assigned to a control field is set on.
- (2) In Application
Development ToolSet, one or more specified fields that are compared to determine
the record sequence in the output file.
- (3) In AFP Utilities, an
input field on the screen view that is used to move the image area up, down,
left, or right.
- (4) In data communications, a field within a frame
that contains the commands, responses, sequence numbers, and poll or final
bit for data link control.
-
control function
- In TELNET, the standard
representation for interconnection functions. The i5/OS implementation of these functions includes
IP, AO, AYT, and SYNCH.
-
control group
- In Backup Recovery
and Media Services, a group of libraries, special values, special operations,
and lists that share common characteristics and are processed together due
to their similar process cycles. The control groups used are backup control
groups and archive control groups.
-
control language (CL)
- The set of
all commands with which a user requests system functions.
-
control language program (CL program)
- A program that is created from source statements consisting entirely
of control language commands.
-
control language variable (CL variable)
- A program variable that is declared in a control language program and
is available only to the CL program.
-
controlled load service
- In QoS, a
level of service that supports the class of applications that are highly sensitive
to overloaded networks. This service emulates a lightly loaded network in
congested environments. For example, audio and videoconferencing would work
well using controlled load service.
-
controlled repetitive loop
- In REXX,
a repetitive DO loop in which the repetitive phrase specifies a control variable.
The variable is given an initial value before the first run of the instruction
list and is then stepped (by adding the result of an optional expression)
before the second and subsequent times that the instruction list is run.
-
controller
- A device that coordinates
and controls the operation of one or more input/output devices (such as workstations)
and synchronizes the operation of such devices with the operation of the system
as a whole.
-
controller card
- A generic term for
any of the I/O controller logic cards, such as storage device controller,
work station controller, or communications controller.
-
controller configuration
- The process
of creating configuration descriptions for the local (device configuration)
and remote (communications configuration) controllers that make up a data
processing system.
-
controller description (CTLD)
- An
object that contains a description of the characteristics of a controller
that is either directly attached to the system or attached to a communications
line. The system-recognized identifier for the object type is *CTLD.
-
control-level indicator
- In RPG, an
indicator (L1 through L9) used to specify certain fields as control fields
and to control the operations that are performed at total and detail time
in the RPG program cycle.
-
controlling subsystem
- The interactive
subsystem that is automatically started first when the system is started and
through which the system operator controls the system.
-
control menu
- See system menu.
-
control message
- In Internet communications,
a message that governs the aspects of a tunnel and sessions within a tunnel.
-
control operator
- A token that performs
a control function such as the symbols ().
-
control panel
- A panel that contains
lights and switches that are used to observe status and to operate or service
the system.
-
control point (CP)
- A collection of
tasks that provide directory and route selection functions for Advanced Peer-to-Peer
Networking (APPN) support.
-
control point server (CP-SVR)
- The
pair of conversations that are used to transmit encapsulated SNA.
-
control region
- The control region
provides the control, scheduling, and work management mechanisms necessary
to coordinate all the shared resources in CICS.
-
control specification
- In RPG, a specification
that provides information about program generation.
-
control statement
- (1) In programming
languages, a statement that is used to interrupt the continuous sequential
processing of programming statements; for example, a conditional statement
such as IF, PAUSE, or STOP.
- (2) In RPG, an entry on a control specification.
-
control station
- The controlling or
primary computer on a multipoint line. The control station controls the sending
and receiving of data.
-
convenience station
- The part of the
tape library that is used to load and unload small numbers of cartridges into
the tape library.
-
conventional memory
- Personal computer
memory that is addressed by DOS from 0 KB to 640 KB. See also expanded memory.
-
converged service processor
- A common
card in both iSeries and RS/6000® systems. The primary function of a
converged service processor is to start the system and diagnose hardware failures.
-
conversation
- (1) A connection between
two programs over a session that allows them to communicate with each other
while processing a transaction. See also transaction, session.
- (2) In dynamic data exchange
(DDE), a connection between a DDE client and a DDE server.
-
Conversational Monitor System (CMS)
- A virtual-machine operating system that provides general interactive time
sharing, problem solving, and program development capabilities.
-
conversation identifier
- A value used
to identify the conversation.
-
conversation key
- See session key.
-
conversation state
- The condition
of a conversation, such as send or receive state. The conversation state reflects
the actions that have been done on that conversation and determines what the
next set of actions may be.
-
conversion
- The converting of a code
point that is assigned to a character in one code page to its corresponding
code point in another code page.
-
conversion table
- An object that contains
a set of hexadecimal characters used to convert one or more characters of
data. The table can be used for the conversion of data being moved between
the system and a device. For example, data stored in one coded character set
may need to be displayed or entered on display devices that support a different
coded character set. The table can also be used to specify an alternative
collating sequence or field conversion functions. The system-recognized identifier
for the object type is *TBL.
-
conversion template table
- A CICS table containing
entries that identify how data is to be converted when transported to or from
a remote system.
-
converted journal entry
- The version
of a journal entry that can be displayed, printed, or written to a database
output file.
-
cooperative application
- In the Systems Application Architecture (SAA) environment, a type of distributed application
in which the user interface portion of the application runs on a programmable
work station while some or all of the remaining code runs on one or more linked
systems.
-
CoOperative Development Environment/400
- A feature of the Application Development ToolSet Client Server (ADTS
CS) licensed program that provides an SAA application development and maintenance
utility for editing, compiling, and debugging third-generation programming
languages.
-
cooperative processing
- Distributed
processing in which processors, typically a programmable workstation and a
host computer, accomplish the work of an application by means of coordinated
or synchronized use of processing functions and system resources.
-
coordinate
- To bring into a common
action, movement, or condition.
-
CORBA
- See Common Object Request Broker Architecture.
-
corequisite fix
- A temporary solution
to or a bypass of a problem that is necessary to provide a complete solution
to correct a problem. The system requires that you apply the corequisite fix
with the PTF that needs it. See also distribution requisite
fix, prerequisite fix.
-
correlated reference
- A reference
to a column of a table that is outside a subquery. See also correlated subquery.
-
correlated subquery
- A subquery that
contains a correlated reference. See also correlated
reference.
-
correlation ID
- See correlation identifier.
-
correlation identifier (correlation ID)
- An application-defined identifier assigned to distributions for the
user's information.
-
correlation name
- An identifier that
designates a table, a view, or an individual row of a table or view within
a single SQL statement. The name can be defined in any FROM clause or in the
first clause of an UPDATE or DELETE statement.
-
correlation table
- In OSI X.400, a
table that records details of distributions sent and received across a gateway
(such as VM/MVS bridge or X.400). A correlation table is used by a gateway
to forward acknowledgments, as appropriate, after they are received.
-
counter
- A data item used for storing
numbers or number representations in a manner that permits these numbers to
be increased or decreased by the value of another number, or to be changed
or reset to zero or to an arbitrary positive or negative value.
-
country ID
- See country identifier.
-
country identifier (country ID)
- The 2-character representation for the country associated with an object.
For example, documents and user profiles can have a country associated with
them.
-
coupler
- A device that connects a
modem to a telephone network.
-
CP
- See control
point.
-
CP-CP session
- In SNA, one of the
parallel sessions between two control points, using LU 6.2 protocols and a
mode name of CPSVCMG, on which network services requests and replies are exchanged.
Each CP of a given pair has one contention-winner session and one contention-loser
session with the other.
-
CPGID
- See code page global identifier.
-
cpi
- See characters
per inch.
-
CPI
- See Common
Programming Interface.
-
CPI-C
- See Common Programming Interface for Communications.
-
CPM
- See continuously
powered main storage.
-
CPP
- See command
processing program.
-
CP-SVR
- See control point server.
-
CPW
- See commercial
processing workload.
-
cracker
- (1) Someone, usually with malicious
intent, who tries to circumvent or subvert system protection mechanisms.
- (2) A hacker with malicious intent.
-
cradle
- The part of a telephone that
holds the handset or receiver.
-
create data
- The data necessary to
convert code to machine instructions.
-
creation date
- The system date when
an object is created.
-
CRG
- See cluster
resource group.
-
CRGM
- See cluster
resource group manager.
-
crop
- In image processing and in multimedia
applications, to cut off or trim.
-
cross-domain key
- In Cryptographic
Support, a type of key-encrypting key used to encrypt a data-encrypting key
that is being sent across a data line or being stored in a file.
-
cross-domain key table
- In Cryptographic
Support, a table in the system-supplied physical file QACRKTBL in library
QUSRSYS used to store all key-encrypting keys other than the host master key
and its variants. Each record of the file contains the name of the key, its
use, and its value. The three types of uses are sending, receiving, and personal
identification numbers (PINs).
-
cross-reference listing
- The part
of the compiler listing that tells where files, fields, and indicators are
defined, referred to, and changed in a program.
-
cross-site mirroring (XSM)
- A function
of i5/OS High Available Switchable Resources, Option 41, that provides geographic
mirroring and the services to switch over or automatically cause a failover
to a secondary copy, potentially at another location, in the event of an outage
at the primary location.
-
CRQ
- See change
request.
-
CRQD
- See change
request description.
-
CRS
- See configuration
report server.
-
cryptanalyst
- In Cryptographic Support,
a specialist in solving cryptographic problems.
-
cryptographic algorithm
- In Cryptographic
Support, a set of rules that specify the mathematical steps required to encrypt
and decrypt data.
-
Cryptographic Service Provider (CSP)
- A feature of the i5/OS operating system that provides APIs. The CCA Cryptographic
Service Provider enables a user to run functions on the 4758 Coprocessor.
-
Cryptographic Support
- The IBM licensed program
that provides support for the encryption and decryption of data, according
to the Data Encryption Algorithm, and for the management of cryptographic
keys and personal identification numbers (PINs).
-
cryptography
- (1) A method of transforming
customer data to conceal its meaning. Cryptographic services include data
encryption and message authentication.
- (2) The science of keeping
data secure. Cryptography allows you to store information or to communicate
with other parties while preventing non-involved parties from understanding
the stored information or the communication. There are two types of cryptography:
(1) shared/secret key (symmetric) cryptography, (2) public key (asymmetric)
cryptography.
- (3) The transformation of data to conceal its information
content and to prevent its unauthorized use or undetected modification.
-
CS
- See cursor
stability.
-
CSMA/CD
- See Carrier Sense Multiple Access with Collision Detection.
-
CSP
- See Cryptographic
Service Provider.
-
CSU
- See channel
service unit.
-
CTLD
- See controller
description.
-
CUA
- See Common User Access.
-
CUD
- See call
user data.
-
CUG
- See closed
user group.
-
cumulative backup
- The process of
copying only data sets that have changed since the last backup of any type.
See also full backup, incremental
backup.
-
cumulative PTF package
- Media containing
the program temporary fixes (PTFs) for i5/OS that have been accumulated from the start
of the current release. PTFs requiring special handling are not included in
a cumulative PTF package.
-
currency sign
- In COBOL, the character
$.
-
currency symbol
- (1) In COBOL, the character
defined by the CURRENCY SIGN clause in the SPECIAL-NAMES paragraph. If no
CURRENCY SIGN clause is present in a COBOL source program, the currency symbol
is identical to the currency sign.
- (2) A character such as the dollar
sign ($) used to identify monetary values.
-
current
- In the Application Development
Manager feature of the Application Development ToolSet licensed program, pertaining
to a part that is built with the latest version of all the source and related
parts used to create it. See also stale.
-
current directory
- The active directory.
When a file name is specified without a directory, the current directory is
searched.
-
current files library
- The files library
to search for database files to be used by the System/36™ environment for the current job.
-
current form
- In query management,
the form being applied against the data to produce the report being displayed
or printed.
-
current interrupted job
- When a job
is interrupted by pressing the Attn key, another job can be started from a
command line. This job can also be interrupted by pressing the Attn key again.
The current interrupted job is the most recently interrupted. The job name
for the current interrupted job is displayed at the top of the Inquiry Options
menu.
-
current library
- The library that
is specified to be the first user library searched for objects requested by
a user. The name for the current library can be specified on the Sign-On display
or in a user profile. When you specify an object name (such as the name of
a file or program) on a command, but do not specify a library name, the system
searches the libraries in the system part of the library list, then searches
the current library before searching the user part of the library list. The
current library is also the library that the system uses when you create a
new object, if you do not specify a library name.
-
current mode
- In the GDDM function, the
characteristics of the controlling session. For example, when a color is defined,
everything the program draws uses that color until the color is changed.
-
current position
- In computer graphics,
the position, in user coordinates, that becomes the starting point for the
next graphics routine, if that routine does not explicitly specify a starting
point.
-
current record
- In COBOL, the record
that is available in the record area associated with the file.
-
current record pointer
- In COBOL,
a method of identifying a record that is used in the sequential processing
of the next record.
-
current release
- The latest available
release of the system that replaced the Licensed Internal Code, operating
system, or both.
-
current state
- In DB2 UDB for iSeries, the state of a connection when it is the one used for SQL statements
that are executed. See also dormant state.
-
current volume pointer
- In COBOL,
a conceptual entity that points to the current volume of a sequential file.
-
current working directory
- The default
directory of a process from which all relative path names are resolved.
-
cursor
- (1) A movable symbol on a display,
often a blinking or solid block of light, that identifies a choice to select,
indicates where user interaction with the keyboard will appear, or indicates
a position of interest on the display surface.
- (2) A named control
structure used by an application program to point to and select a row of data
from a set.
-
cursor movement key
- A key that a
user presses to move the cursor on the screen.
-
cursor stability (CS)
- An isolation
level that locks any row accessed by a transaction of an application while
the cursor is positioned on the row. The lock remains in effect until the
next row is fetched or the transaction is terminated. If any data is changed
in a row, the lock is held until the change is committed to the database.
See also read stability, repeatable read, uncommitted read.
-
curve fitting
- See smoothness of curve.
-
Customer Information Control System
- See CICS.
-
customization
- The ability to change
how objects on a personal computer look and work. For example, you can tailor
what objects are in a work area by creating, moving, or copying objects to
the work area.
-
CVDA
- See CICS-value
data area.
-
CWA
- See common
work area.
-
cycle
- To end a management collection
object that is currently in use and to open a new object for storing future
collections. This process prevents collection objects from becoming too large.
-
cyclic redundancy check
- A redundancy
check in which the check key is generated by a cyclic algorithm
-
cylinder
- On a magnetic disk or in
an assembly of disks, the set of all tracks that can be accessed by all the
magnetic heads of a comb in a given position, without repositioning the access
mechanism.