Irish | English |
Prótacal Aistrithe Comhad | File Transfer Protocol (A member of the TCP/IP suite of protocols, used to copy files between two computers on the Internet. Both computers must support their respective FTP roles: one must be an FTP client and the other an FTP server) |
Prótacal Aistrithe Hipirtéacs | Hypertext Transfer Protocol (The Internet protocol used to deliver information over the World Wide Web) |
Prótacal Ciandeisce | Remote Desktop Protocol (A proprietary protocol to provide remote display and input capabilities over network connections for Windows®-based applications between two computers) |
Prótacal Idirlín | Internet Protocol (A routable protocol in the TCP/IP protocol suite that is responsible for IP addressing, routing, and the fragmentation and reassembly of IP packets) |
Prótacal Nasctha Sonraí | Link Control Protocol (A PPP control protocol that negotiates link and PPP parameters to dynamically configure the data-link layer of a PPP connection) |
Prótacal Pointe go Pointe | Point-to-Point Protocol (A set of industry-standard framing and authentication protocols that are included with Windows to ensure interoperability with other remote access software. PPP negotiates configuration parameters for multiple layers of the Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) model. The Internet standard for serial communications, PPP defines how data packets are exchanged with other Internet-based systems using a modem connection. PPP is documented in RFC 1661) |
Prótacal Pointe go Pointe thar Ethernet | Point-to-Point Protocol over Ethernet (A specification for connecting users on an Ethernet network to the Internet through a broadband connection, such as a single DSL line, wireless device, or cable modem. Using PPPoE and a broadband modem, LAN users can gain individual authenticated access to high-speed data networks. By combining Ethernet and Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP), PPPoE provides an efficient way to create a separate connection for each user to a remote server) |
Prótacal Rialaithe Tarchurtha | Transmission Control Protocol (The protocol within TCP/IP that governs the breakup of data messages into packets to be sent via IP, and the reassembly and verification of the complete messages from packets received by IP) |
Prótacal Rialaithe Tarchurtha/Prótacal Idirlín | Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (A set of networking protocols widely used on the Internet that provides communications across interconnected networks of computers with diverse hardware architectures and various operating systems. TCP/IP includes standards for how computers communicate and conventions for connecting networks and routing traffic) |
Prótacal Rochtana Teachtaireachtaí Idirlín | Internet Message Access Protocol (A method computers use to send and receive e-mail messages. It allows you to access e-mail without downloading it to your computer) |
Prótacal Simplí Rochtana Comhadlainne | Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (The primary access protocol for Active Directory. LDAP is an industry-standard protocol, established by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), that allows users to query and update information in a directory service. Active Directory supports both LDAP version 2 and LDAP version 3) |
Prótacal Stádais Deimhniúcháin ar Líne | Online Certificate Status Protocol (A protocol that allows real-time validation of a certificate's status by having the CryptoAPI make a call to an OCSP responder and the OCSP responder providing an immediate validation of the revocation status for the presented certificate. Typically, an OCSP responder responds with the revocation status check request based on the certificate revocation list (CRL) or other forms of revocation status it retrieves from the certification authorities) |
Prótacal Tollánaithe Shraith a Dó | Layer Two Tunneling Protocol (An industry-standard Internet tunneling protocol that provides encapsulation for sending Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) frames across packet-oriented media. For IP networks, L2TP traffic is sent as User Datagram Protocol (UDP) messages. In Microsoft operating systems, L2TP is used in conjunction with Internet Protocol security (IPSec) as a virtual private network (VPN) technology to provide remote access or router-to-router VPN connections. L2TP is described in RFC 2661) |