- Industry: Computer
- Number of terms: 98482
- Number of blossaries: 0
- Company Profile:
Sometimes referred to as “Big Blue” IBM is a multinational corporation headquartered in Armonk, New York. It manufactures computer hardware and software and provides information technology and services.
(1) Pertaining to the control of a security policy.<br />(2) Pertaining to a federated wrapper that is defined, via the DB2_FENCED wrapper option, to run in the database manager process. When a wrapper runs in trusted mode, the database manager is not protected from changes made by this object. See also fenced.
Industry:Software
(1) An individually installable option or update. Options provide specific function and updates correct an error in, or enhance, a previously installed option.<br />(2) A hierarchical grouping of files managed as a unit for balancing workload across a cluster.
Industry:Software
(1) In JSP programming, an action described in a portable manner by a tag library descriptor and a collection of Java classes and imported into a JSP page by a taglib directive. (Sun)<br />(2) A Java or non-Java process definition that you can define as a part of a health policy action plan.
Industry:Software
(1) Pertaining to the dialog-like exchange of information between people and a computer. See also batch.<br />(2) Pertaining to a programme or system that alternately accepts input and responds.
Industry:Software
(1) An instance of a data-processing system that appears to be at the exclusive disposal of a single user, but whose functions are accomplished by sharing the resources of a physical data-processing system.<br />(2) An abstract specification for a computing device that can be implemented in different ways in software and hardware.
Industry:Software
(1) In Language Environment, an independent collection of routines, one of which is designated as the main routine. An enclave is similar to a programme or run unit.<br />(2) A transaction that can span multiple dispatchable units (service request blocks and tasks) in one or more address spaces and is reported on and managed as a unit.
Industry:Software
(1) Pertaining to the direction of data flow, which is toward the destination of a transmission. See also upstream.<br />(2) Pertaining to the direction of the flow, which is from the first node in the process (upstream) toward the last node in the process (downstream).
Industry:Software
(1) An instance of a programme running on a system and the resources that it uses.<br />(2) For Common Programming APIs ToolKit, the collection of all i5/OS jobs sharing an activation group.<br />(3) In System Manager, a combination of systems management applications that accomplishes one or more customer tasks or a part of a task. A process can contain other processes.<br />(4) See job.<br />(5) In Business Transaction Services (BTS), a collection of one or more activities. A process is the largest unit that CICS business transaction services can work with, and has a unique name by which it can be referenced and invoked. Typically, a process is an instance of a business transaction.<br />(6) A progressively continuing procedure consisting of a series of controlled activities that are systematically directed toward a particular result or end.<br />(7) An address space and single thread of control that executes within that address space, and its required system resources. A process is created by another process issuing the fork() function. The process that issues the fork() function is known as the parent process, and the new process created by the fork() function is known as the child process.<br />(8) The sequence of documents or messages to be exchanged between the Community Managers and participants to run a business transaction.<br />(9) A separately executable unit of work.
Industry:Software
(1) In licence management, a licence gives the user authorization to use a user-based priced product.<br />(2) A permission granted by competent authority to engage in a business or occupation or in an action otherwise unlawful.
Industry:Software
(1) Pertaining to the direction opposite to data flow, which is toward the source of a transmission. See also downstream.<br />(2) Pertaining to the direction of the flow, which is from the start of the process (upstream) toward the end of the process (downstream).
Industry:Software