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Glossary
- macOS
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Macintosh Operating System. Formerly known as Mac OS X.
- Mb
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A megabit.
- MBPS
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A unit of measure used to describe the rate of data transmission equal to one millions bits per second.
- mesh network
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A network topology in which each node relays data for the network. All mesh nodes cooperate in the distribution of data in the network.
- MHz
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A unit of frequency equal to 10^6 hertz, which is defined as one cycle per second.
- MIB
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A database used for managing the entities in a communication network. Often associated with SNMP.
- Microsoft Azure
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Microsoft's cloud computing platform. Barracuda Networks was the first Microsoft Azure Certified Security Solution Provider, with a product line that includes the Barracuda Web Application Firewall, CloudGen Firewall, Message Archiver, and Email Security Gateway.
- MIME type
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Two-part identifier for file formats and format contents transmitted over the Internet.
- MOS
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Measure representing the overall quality of a system or stimulus, calculated by taking the arithmetic mean of individual values of quality. Often used for, but not limited to, video, audio and audiovisual quality.
- MS-CHAP
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Protocol used to authenticate VPN clients over L2TP/PPTP or to authenticate HTTP Proxy users.
- MTA
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Software that transports email messages from one computer to another by using a client-server architecture.
- MTU
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A specification in a data link protocol that defines the maximum number of bytes that can be carried in any one packet on that link.
- multilayer switch
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Switch that filters and forwards packets based on MAC addresses and network addresses. A subset of LAN switch.
- multiplexing
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Scheme that allows multiple logical signals to be transmitted simultaneously across a single physical channel.
- multitenancy
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The existence of multiple clients sharing resources (services or applications) on distinct physical hardware. Due to the on-demand nature of cloud, most services are multitenant.
- name server
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Server connected to a network that resolves network names into network addresses.
- NAT
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The process of modifying IP address information in IP packet headers while in transit across a traffic routing device. The simplest type of NAT provides a one to one translation of IP addresses.
- NAT instance
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A NAT device, configured by a user, that performs network address translation in a VPC public subnet to secure inbound Internet traffic.
- NAT Traversal
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A computer networking methodology with the goal to establish and maintain Internet protocol connections across gateways that implement network address translation (NAT). NAT breaks the principle of end-to-end connectivity originally envisioned in the design of the Internet.
- NetBIOS
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API used by applications on an IBM LAN to request services from lower-level network processes. These services might include session establishment and termination, and information transfer.
- Network Access Client
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Barracuda Networks product that integrates with the Access Control Service and lets you configure access policies and rules depending identity and client health state. The NAC Client consists of Barracuda Personal Firewall, Barracuda Access Monitor, and Barracuda VPN Client.
- network object
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A firewall object on the Barracuda CloudGen Firewall that references networks, IP addresses, hostnames, or interfaces. Network objects can be applied to access rules.
- Network Time Protocol
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Networking protocol for clock synchronization between computer systems over packet-switched, variable-latency data networks.
- NextGen Remote
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Software that provides system administrators remote access to F-Series Firewalls and Control Centers through their iOS device.
- NG Control Center
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A central administration appliance designed to manage a large number of Barracuda NG Firewalls.
- non-stub area
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Resource-intensive OSPF area that carries a default route, static routes, intra-area routes, interarea routes, and external routes. The only OSPF areas that can have virtual links configured across them and that can contain an ASBR.
- NoSQL
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Nonrelational database systems that are highly available, scalable, and optimized for high performance. Instead of the relational model, NoSQL databases (like Amazon DynamoDB) use alternate models for data management, such as keyvalue pairs or document storage.
- NTLM
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A suite of Microsoft security protocols that provides authentication, integrity, and confidentiality to users.
- null ciphers
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Form of encryption where the plaintext is mixed with a large amount of non-cipher material.
- offline authentication
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Authentication method with an internal IP address as destination. Offline Authentication Works with all protocols (for example, POP3).
- offsite
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Refers to a location other than the subject site. Example: Barracuda Cloud Storage subscription plans provide diverse offsite storage that scales to meet your changing data requirements.
- On-Demand Instance
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An Amazon EC2 pricing option that charges you for compute capacity by the hour with no long-term commitment.
- ONC-RPC
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Remote procedure call system based on calling conventions used in Unix and the C programming language.
- onsite
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At the place where a business or activity happens. Compare to offsite.
- OpenStack
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A free and open-source cloud computing software platform used to control pools of processing, storage, and networking resources in a datacenter.
- OSB transformation
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Orthogonal sparse bigram transformation. In machine learning, a transformation that aids in text string analysis and that is an alternative to the n-gram transformation. OSB transformations are generated by sliding the window of size n words over the text, and outputting every pair of words that includes the first word in the window.
- OSPF
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A dynamic routing protocol. OSPF is a link state protocol that uses Dijkstra algorithm to calculate the shortest path tree.