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The Data Distribution Service (DDS) for real-time systems is an Object Management Group (OMG) machine-to-machine (sometimes called middleware or connectivity framework) standard that aims to enable dependable, high-performance, interoperable, real-time, scalable data exchanges using a publish–subscribe pattern.
Dat is free software distributed under the terms of the BSD-3-Clause license. One of the main implementations is Beaker, a web browser that seamlessly handles dat:// URLs and allows building and seeding Dat websites. [13] Homebase is a server-side permanent seeding tool for Dat. [14]
In the field of programming a data transfer object (DTO [1] [2]) is an object that carries data between processes. The motivation for its use is that communication between processes is usually done resorting to remote interfaces (e.g., web services), where each call is an expensive operation. [ 2 ]
SDK—Software Development Kit; SDL—Simple DirectMedia Layer; SDN—Service Delivery Network; SDP—Session Description Protocol; SDR—Software-Defined Radio; SDRAM—Synchronous Dynamic Random-Access Memory; SDSL—Symmetric DSL; SE—Single Ended; SEI—Software Engineering Institute; SEO—Search Engine Optimization; SFTP—Secure FTP
Amiga Envoy Network Inquiry Protocol 383: Yes: HP data alarm manager 384: Yes: A Remote Network Server System 387: Yes: AURP (AppleTalk Update-based Routing Protocol) [86] 388: Yes: Assigned: Unidata LDM near real-time data distribution protocol [87] [self-published source] [88] [self-published source] 389: Yes: Assigned: Lightweight Directory ...
Message-oriented middleware is in contrast to streaming-oriented middleware where data is communicated as a sequence of bytes with no explicit message boundaries. Note that streaming protocols are almost always built above protocols using discrete messages such as frames , datagrams , packets , cells , et al.
This section is about data exchange between hardware devices. In order for the devices to be able to read and exchange data, they would use a hardware-specific protocol (such as the radio signal) which is generated by a hardware device acting as a sending party (the radio tower), and can be interpreted by another hardware device which is the receiving party (your kitchen radio for instance).
The contents of the Real-Time Publish-Subscribe (RTPS) Protocol page were merged into Data Distribution Service. For the contribution history and old versions of the redirected page, please see its history ; for the discussion at that location, see its talk page .