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  2. Network diagram software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_diagram_software

    These tools help users to create network topology diagrams by adding icons to a canvas and using lines and connectors to draw linkages between nodes. This category of tools is similar to general drawing and paint tools. Typical capabilities include but not limited to: Libraries of icons for devices; Ability to add shapes and annotations to maps

  3. Splunk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Splunk

    Splunk Inc. is an American software company based in San Francisco, California, [2] that produces software for searching, monitoring, ...

  4. Event-driven architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Event-driven_architecture

    Event driven architecture has two primary topologies: “broker topology” wherein components broadcast events to the entire system without any orchestrator. It provides the highest performance and scalability. Whereas in “mediator topology” there is a central orchestrator which controls workflow of events.

  5. Network topology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_topology

    Physical topology is the placement of the various components of a network (e.g., device location and cable installation), while logical topology illustrates how data flows within a network. Distances between nodes, physical interconnections, transmission rates , or signal types may differ between two different networks, yet their logical ...

  6. Computer network diagram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_network_diagram

    The physical network topology can be directly represented in a network diagram, as it is simply the physical graph represented by the diagrams, with network nodes as vertices and connections as undirected or direct edges (depending on the type of connection). [3]

  7. Distributed computing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributed_computing

    The figure on the right illustrates the difference between distributed and parallel systems. Figure (a) is a schematic view of a typical distributed system; the system is represented as a network topology in which each node is a computer and each line connecting the nodes is a communication link.

  8. Torus interconnect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torus_interconnect

    The second is a two dimension torus, in the shape of a 'doughnut'. The animation illustrates how a two dimension torus is generated from a rectangle by connecting its two pairs of opposite edges. At one dimension, a torus topology is equivalent to a ring interconnect network, in the shape of a circle. At two dimensions, it becomes equivalent to ...

  9. Mesh networking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mesh_networking

    Mesh topology may be contrasted with conventional star/tree local network topologies in which the bridges/switches are directly linked to only a small subset of other bridges/switches, and the links between these infrastructure neighbours are hierarchical. While star-and-tree topologies are very well established, highly standardized and vendor ...