Pathname component, Pathname – HP Integrity NonStop H-Series User Manual

Page 65

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Glossary

TNSVU User’s Guide528143-003

Glossary -17

Open Systems Interconnection Layer 2

Open Systems Interconnection Layer 2. The data-link control level of the Open Systems

Interconnection (OSI) model, composed of asynchronous or minimal line control
protocols, byte-oriented or character-oriented protocols, and bit-synchronous or
bit-oriented protocols. Data link protocols can be defined in terms of method of access
of data, link relationship of stations, error detection scheme, error recovery, message
formatting, logical half-duplex or full-duplex operation, code, and machine
transparency.

operating system. See

HP NonStop™ operating system

.

operational environment. The conditions under which your system performs. These

conditions include the devices and communications lines that are made active and the
system and application processes that are started at system startup.

OS. See

HP NonStop™ operating system

.

OSS. See

Open System Services (OSS)

.

OSS environment. See

Open System Services (OSS) environment

.

OSS Monitor. See

Open System Services (OSS) Monitor

.

OSS process ID. In the Open System Services (OSS) environment, the unique identifier

that identifies a process during the lifetime of the process and during the lifetime of the
process group of that process. See also

PID

.

OSS signal. See

Open System Services (OSS) signal

.

OSS user ID. See

HP NonStop™ operating system user ID

.

pathname. In the Open System Services (OSS) file system and Network File System

(NFS), the string of characters that uniquely identifies a file within its file system. A
pathname can be either relative or absolute. See also ISO/IEC IS 9945-1:1990
(ANSI/IEEE Std. 1003.1-1990 or POSIX.1), Clause 2.2.2.57.

pathname component. See

filename

.

PIC. (See

position-independent code (PIC)

.

PID. In the Open System Services (OSS) environment, a synonym for

process ID

. OSS

process ID is the preferred term in HP NonStop™ system publications.

In the Guardian environment, PID is sometimes used to mean either:

A Guardian process identifier such as the

process ID

The

cpu, pin

value that is unique to a process within an Expand node (See

HP

NonStop™ operating system user ID

.)

PIN. See

process identification number (PIN)

.

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