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GARP
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ALSO CALLED: Generic Attributes Registration Protocol, Group Address Registration Protocol, Registration Protocols, and General Attributes Registration Protocol
DEFINITION: GARP (Generic Attribute Registration Protocol) is a local area network (LAN) protocol that defines procedures by which end stations and switches can register and de-register attributes, such as network identifiers or addresses, with each other. Every end station and switch thus has a record, or list, of all the other end stations and switches that
Definition continues below.
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| Recent Vendor Reports on GARP |
| Your request for GARP resources returned limited or no results. The request has been expanded to include Network Management Protocols resources.
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Presentation Transcript: The Service Delivery Platform - E Unum Pluribus or, in English, "Out of One, Many"
| sponsored by Pitney Bowes Group 1 Software
WHITE PAPER:
Based on a Pitney Bowes Group 1/TechTarget Webcast, this white paper describes how service providers have been deploying overlay networks to launch new services and rolling out "Overlay OSS" to manage them, which creates a multiplicity of networks.
Posted: 12 Nov 2008 | Published: 12 Nov 2008
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eGuide: New Network Management - Application Benchmarking for QoE
| sponsored by CA
WHITE PAPER:
In this E-Guide, enterprise management analyst Dennis Drogseth offers you an in-depth look into application benchmarking for quality of experience (QoE).
Posted: 11 Nov 2008 | Published: 11 Nov 2008
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Managing and Monitoring a Primary Wireless Network
| sponsored by Intel Corporation
WHITE PAPER:
Intel IT designed a highly automated approach to managing an enterprise primary wireless LAN, with a focus on service level management and monitoring. This white paper has the details.
Posted: 12 Aug 2008 | Published: 01 Feb 2007
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Bandwidth Management for Peer-to-Peer Applications
| sponsored by F5 Networks
WHITE PAPER:
This paper explains how more and more users are using Peer-to-Peer (P2P) protocols to share very large files as the proliferation of broadband increases. This trend has exponentially increased traffic flows across very wide area networks.
Posted: 28 Apr 2008 | Published: 01 Jan 2006
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GARP DEFINITION (continued):
can be reached at any given time. When an attribute for an end station or switch is registered or de-registered according to GARP, the set of reachable end stations and switches, called participants, is modified according to specific rules. The defined set of participants at any given time, along with their attributes, is a subset of the network topology called the reachability tree. Data frames are propagated only to registered end stations. This prevents attempts to send data to end stations that are not reachable. GARP was previously called Group
GARP definition sponsored by SearchNetworking.com, powered by WhatIs.com an online computer dictionary
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