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router |
Also found in: Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.01 sec. |
routerPortable electric power tool used in carpentry and furniture making that consists of an electric motor, a base, two handle knobs, and bits (cutting tools). A router can cut fancy edges for shelving, grooves for storm windows and weather stripping, circles and ovals with smooth edges, and round corners on work of all types. routerA network device that forwards packets from one network to another. Based on internal routing tables, routers read each incoming packet and decide how to forward it. The destination address in the packets determines which line (interface) outgoing packets are directed to. In large-scale enterprise routers, the current traffic load, congestion, line costs and other factors determine which line to forward to.
router1 any of various tools or machines for hollowing out, cutting grooves, etc. router2 Computing a device that allows packets of data to be moved efficiently between two points on a network router [′rau̇d·ər] (communications) A device that selects an appropriate pathway for a message and routes the message accordingly. (design engineering) A chisel with a curved point for cleaning out features such as grooves and mortises on wood members. (mechanical engineering) A machine tool with a rapidly rotating vertical spindle and cutter for making furrows, mortises, and similar grooves.
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The guide addresses how to determine bandwidth needs; configure network routers, gateways, firewalls and switches; and configure, secure and troubleshoot your deployment. Both binary and ternary CAMs have emerged as the search engines of choice in a number of applications including network routers and switches, Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) and firewalls because of their ability to conduct high-speed table lookups that are required to meet the ever-growing traffic on the Internet," said Krishna Balachandran, director of product marketing at Virage Logic. Xyplex makes wide-area network routers and remote-access servers, while MRV specializes in local-area network devices such as high-speed networking and fiber-optic transmission systems. |
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