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Virtual Private Network Model Versus Overlay Virtual Private Network Model - ...ture.
Service providers can deploy two major Virtual Private Network models to provide Virtual Private Network services to their customers:
...
Ajax - ...5, interest in this methodology soared. Could it really be that simply giving this
approach a snappy name like Ajax was responsible for the sudde...
Multiprotocol Label Switching - ...ot new. Frame Relay and Asynchronous Transfer Mode use it to move frames or cells
throughout a network. In Frame Relay, the frame can be any leng...
Label Distribution with Label Distribution Protocol - ...l information base (LIB). Each Label Switch Router has only one local binding
per prefix, at least when the label space is per platform. If the l...
The origins of JavaScript, DOM - ...debuted in Netscape
Navigator 2 in 1995.
At the time of JavaScript 1.0’s release, Netscape Navigator dominated the browser market.
...
Software to write JavaScript - ...UBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.1//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml11/DTD/xhtml11.dtd">
<html>
<head>
...
Document Object Model - ...rogramming languages, on the other hand, “object” has a very specific meaning.
Objects of desire
At t...
Label Switched Path - ... is the ingress Label Switch Router for that Label Switch Routers, whereas
the last Label Switch Router of the Label Switch Routers is the egress...
Label Switch Routers Control Modes - ...dependent Label Switch Routers Control mode. In this control mode, each Label Switch Router creates a local binding for a
particular Forward...
How Multiprotocol Label Switching Works - ...l Distribution Protocol is down is used unless it is the only path. (No other paths have a better
metric.) After the Label Distribution Protocol ...
Multiprotocol Label Switching and Asynchronous Transfer Mode Architecture - ...sfer Mode was predominantly in the WAN network. Many vendors built Asynchronous Transfer Mode switches
that could set up virtual circuits in the ...
Label Advertisement - ...change IP prefixes which are put in the
routing table. After Label Distribution Protocol forms a session across the control VC, it can exchange ...
Cisco Express Forwarding - ...n understand its
role in Multiprotocol Label Switching networks.
Overview of Cisco IOS Switching Methods
The b...
Load Balancing in CEF - ...maximum-path 2 under the
routing protocol Open Shortest Path First (OSPF), only two OSPF paths per prefix are allowed in
the routing...
Multiprotocol Label Switching Virtual Private Network - ... Frame Relay and Asynchronous Transfer Mode services that were popular before it, Multiprotocol Label Switching Virtual Private Network
is now see...
Virtual Private LAN Service - ...dquo; in VPLS. When the customer
with different Ethernet sites connects to an Multiprotocol Label Switching backbone where VPLS is deployed, it a...
Multiprotocol Label Switching Operation and Maintenance - ...detect the problems that are purely in the
data plane when the network is running Multiprotocol Label Switching. Multiprotocol Label Switching O...
Router Alert Option and Router Alert Label - ...her before
forwarding it. What this inspection means is not defined and is up to the software implementation
on the router. The Router Alert ...
FCS Retention and OAM Protocols - ... Label Switch Routers introduce a problem whereby they change the payload of the Multiprotocol Label Switching packet.
This problem can go undet...
Linux Based Networking - ...e talk about high-performance Layer 3 switches these days, they talk about switches that can perform OSI Layer 3 tasks and they expect you to know w...
TCP IP Protocols - ...utlook Express for example), which has SMTP and POP3 functions according to OSI Layer 7 (application).
Layer 6: You send t...
The TCP/IP Internet Layer - ...mary concern is to find the best path between the endpoints, without caring about the contents of the packet. IP does not perform error checking and...
IP Addressing, IP Subnetting, and IP Supernetting - ... 11000000101010000000000100000001 is a valid IP address. For the ease of use, IP addresses are represented in a form called the dotted decimal forma...
Public and Private IP Addresses - ...has been succeeded by IANA (Internet Assigned Numbers Authority). IANA makes sure to provide unique IP network addresses to Internet Service Provide...
IP Supernetting or CIDR - ... addressing shows us the following:
Address ...
Linux Security Threats - ...onsider in running a safe network.
As hard as it may seem to protect your network from the outside world, the most dangerous threats always come f...
IP Spoofing - ...ofed to the attacked IP address. The receiver then sends back replies that can contain large amounts of data to the attacked IP address resulting in...
BIND Domain Name System DNS - ...ital for internet connection; so in order to disrupt services to victims, attackers have a great interest in bringing down DNS servers. Although BIN...
Simple Network Management Protocol SNMP - ...ces use version 1 or version 2, which have a very weak authentication method. SNMP version 1 contains a set of bugs in the way SNMP traps and reques...
Firewalls, netfilter/iptables - ...advanced routing and traffic shaping.
This article is intended to introduce the tools we will use throughout this article. However, netfilter ...
latest articles under "Software security"
Navigation: Categories » Computers and technology » Software security
Below is a list of all Software security articles. If you want to find a tutorial by keywords, all you have to do is a quick search in our directory. Just use the search option available at the top-right side of the page. The website search is powered by web-articles. Or, if you want to read specific Software security tutorial, just point to it. The newest articles and tutorials are shown first in the list. To access the last ones, browse the pages 2, 3, 4... at the bottom. Also, you may browse articles alphabetically ordered.
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Below is a list of all Software security articles. If you want to find a tutorial by keywords, all you have to do is a quick search in our directory. Just use the search option available at the top-right side of the page. The website search is powered by web-articles. Or, if you want to read specific Software security tutorial, just point to it. The newest articles and tutorials are shown first in the list. To access the last ones, browse the pages 2, 3, 4... at the bottom. Also, you may browse articles alphabetically ordered.
Page# 1 (last added articles shown first)
Software protection and Intrusion detection (06/03/2007)
(...) How many times have we read stories of reformed criminals talking about targeting the ‘easy’ house without the alarm or dog? The contemporary internet security landscape is increasingly mirroring our domestic analogy. IDS is not ‘fire and forget’ Intrusion detection, above perhaps any other security measure, cannot be thought of as ‘fire and forget’. The threats faced by security staff change day by day and the IDS should be updated correspondingly. (...)
(...) How many times have we read stories of reformed criminals talking about targeting the ‘easy’ house without the alarm or dog? The contemporary internet security landscape is increasingly mirroring our domestic analogy. IDS is not ‘fire and forget’ Intrusion detection, above perhaps any other security measure, cannot be thought of as ‘fire and forget’. The threats faced by security staff change day by day and the IDS should be updated correspondingly. (...)
Open source in the enterprise (06/03/2007)
(...) In proprietary software, a single company claims ‘ownership’ of the software, and keeps a tight grip on its ‘intellectual property’. Often part of the ‘intellectual property’ they so carefully guard is the nature of that ‘intellectual property’ itself. By refusing either to open their standards or in fact to use existing open standards, many companies adhere to a policy of security through obscurity, whereby nothing at all is made public about the way the software works, particularly with regard to security issues. (...)
(...) In proprietary software, a single company claims ‘ownership’ of the software, and keeps a tight grip on its ‘intellectual property’. Often part of the ‘intellectual property’ they so carefully guard is the nature of that ‘intellectual property’ itself. By refusing either to open their standards or in fact to use existing open standards, many companies adhere to a policy of security through obscurity, whereby nothing at all is made public about the way the software works, particularly with regard to security issues. (...)
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