Tomcat i7230A S5160 
                                                                     Appendix I: Glossary 
Cache size: refers to the physical size of the cache onboard. This should not be confused with 
the cacheable area, which is the total amount of memory which can be scanned by the system 
in search of data to put into the cache. A typical setup would be a cache size of 512KB, and a 
cacheable area of 512MB. In this case, up to 512KB of the main memory onboard is capable 
of being cached. However, only 512KB of this memory will be in the cache at any given 
moment. Any main memory above 512MB could never be cached. 
Closed and open jumpers: jumpers and jumper pins are active when they are  on  or 
 closed , and inactive when they are  off  or  open . 
CMOS (Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductors): chips that hold the basic startup 
information for the BIOS. 
COM port: another name for the serial port, which is called as such because it transmits the 
eight bits of a byte of data along one wire, and receives data on another single wire (that is, 
the data is transmitted in serial form, one bit after another). Parallel ports transmit the bits of a 
byte on eight different wires at the same time (that is, in parallel form, eight bits at the same 
time). 
DDR (Double Data Rate): is a technology designed to double the clock speed of the memory. 
It activates output on both the rising and falling edge of the system clock rather than on just 
the rising edge, potentially doubling output. 
DIMM (Dual In line Memory Module): faster and more capacious form of RAM than SIMMs, 
and do not need to be installed in pairs. 
DIMM bank: sometimes called DIMM sockets, because the physical slot and the logical unit 
are the same. That is, one DIMM module fits into one DIMM socket, which is capable of acting 
as a memory bank. 
DMA (Direct Memory Access): channels that are similar to IRQs. DMA channels allow 
hardware devices (like soundcards or keyboards) to access the main memory without 
involving the CPU. This frees up CPU resources for other tasks. As with IRQs, it is vital that 
you do not double up devices on a single line. Plug n Play devices will take care of this for 
you. 
Doze mode: in this mode, only the CPU's speed is slowed. 
DRAM (Dynamic RAM): widely available, very affordable form of RAM which has the 
unfortunate tendency to lose data if it is not recharged regularly (every few milliseconds). This 
refresh requirement makes DRAM three to ten times slower than non recharged RAM such as 
SRAM. 
ECC (Error Correction Code or Error Checking and Correcting): allows data to be 
checked for errors during run time. Errors can subsequently be corrected at the same time 
that they're found. 
EEPROM (Electrically Erasable Programmable ROM): also called Flash BIOS, is a ROM 
chip which can, unlike normal ROM, be updated. This allows you to keep up with changes in 
the BIOS programs without having to buy a new chip. TYAN's BIOS updates can be found at 
http://www.tyan.com 
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http://www.tyan.com 






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