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  2. F5, Inc. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F5,_Inc.

    F5, Inc., originally named "F5 Labs" [7] and formerly branded "F5 Networks, Inc." was established in 1996. [8] Currently, the company's public-facing branding [9] generally presents the company as just "F5." The company's name is a reference to the highest intensity tornado on the Fujita scale. [10]

  3. List of products based on FreeBSD - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_products_based_on...

    Blue Coat Systems network appliances [9] Borderware appliances (firewall, VPN, Anti-SPAM, Web filter etc.) are based on a FreeBSD kernel [10] Check Point IPSO security appliances [11] Citrix Systems Netscaler application delivery software is based on FreeBSD [12] Coyote Point GX-series web acceleration and load balancer appliances [13]

  4. Load-balanced switch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Load-balanced_switch

    A load-balanced switch backbone can deliver 100% throughput with an overcapacity of just 2x, as measured across the whole system. The underpinnings of large backbone networks are usually optical channels that cannot be quickly switched. These map well to the constant-rate 2R/N channels of the load-balanced switch's mesh.

  5. Nginx - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nginx

    A large fraction of web servers use Nginx, [10] often as a load balancer. [11] A company of the same name was founded in 2011 to provide support and NGINX Plus paid software. [12] In March 2019, the company was acquired by F5 for $670 million. [13]

  6. Coyote Point Systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coyote_Point_Systems

    Coyote Point Systems was a manufacturer of computer networking equipment for application traffic management, also known as server load balancing. In March 2013, the company was acquired by Fortinet. [1] The company introduced hardware-based server load balancers nearly simultaneously with other large companies such as F5 in the late 1990s. [2]

  7. Load balancing (computing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Load_balancing_(computing)

    Load balancing is widely used in data center networks to distribute traffic across many existing paths between any two servers. [27] It allows more efficient use of network bandwidth and reduces provisioning costs. In general, load balancing in datacenter networks can be classified as either static or dynamic.

  8. Network load balancing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_Load_Balancing

    Network load balancing is the ability to balance traffic across two or more WAN links without using complex routing protocols like BGP.. This capability balances network sessions like Web, email, etc. over multiple connections in order to spread out the amount of bandwidth used by each LAN user, thus increasing the total amount of bandwidth available.

  9. Category:Load balancing (computing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Load_balancing...

    Network load balancing; Network Load Balancing Services; P. Processor affinity; R. Round-robin DNS This page was last edited on 20 June 2022, at 11:40 (UTC). Text ...