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Reliable Datagram Sockets (RDS) is a high-performance, low-latency, reliable, connectionless protocol for delivering datagrams. It is developed by Oracle Corporation. It was included in the Linux kernel 2.6.30 which was released on 9 June 2009. The code was contributed by the OpenFabrics Alliance (OFA). [1]
[1]: §21.3.2 302 Moved Temporarily The client should try at the address in the Contact field. If an Expires field is present, the client may cache the result for that period of time. [1]: §21.3.3 305 Use Proxy The Contact field details a proxy that must be used to access the requested destination. [1]: §21.3.4 380 Alternative Service
The requested resource is available only through a proxy, the address for which is provided in the response. For security reasons, many HTTP clients (such as Mozilla Firefox and Internet Explorer) do not obey this status code. [10] 306 Switch Proxy No longer used. Originally meant "Subsequent requests should use the specified proxy."
Proxy-Authenticate: Request authentication to access the proxy. Proxy-Authenticate: Basic: Permanent RFC 9110: Public-Key-Pins [55] HTTP Public Key Pinning, announces hash of website's authentic TLS certificate: Public-Key-Pins: max-age=2592000; pin-sha256="E9CZ9INDbd+2eRQozYqqbQ2yXLVKB9+xcprMF+44U1g="; Permanent RFC 7469: Retry-After
A number of these constraints can be minimized through the use of virtual server environments, wherein the hypervisor itself is cluster-aware and provides seamless migration of virtual machines (including running memory state) between physical hosts—see Microsoft Server 2012 and 2016 Failover Clusters. A key difference between this approach ...
The key server component of RDS is Terminal Server (termdd.sys), which listens on TCP port 3389. When a Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) client connects to this port, it is tagged with a unique SessionID and associated with a freshly spawned console session (Session 0, keyboard, mouse and character mode UI only).
Failover occurs automatically: When a link has an intermediate failure, for example in a media converter between the devices, a peer system may not perceive any connectivity problems. With static link aggregation, the peer would continue sending traffic down the link causing the connection to fail.
81346-10 also known as RDS-PS (Reference Designation System for Power Supply Systems). [ 13 ] is maintained by ISO/IEC Joint Working Group ISO/TC10/SC10/JWG10. [ 14 ] The latest version 81346-10:2022 is published as a full International Standard, and replaces the previous Technical Specification ISO/TS 81346-10:2015.