- Industry: Computer; Software
- Number of terms: 54848
- Number of blossaries: 7
- Company Profile:
Apple Inc., formerly Apple Computer, Inc., is an American multinational corporation headquartered in Cupertino, California, that designs, develops, and sells consumer electronics, computer software and personal computers.
The UID of a process. Each process has three user IDs: the real user ID (RUID), effective user ID (EUID), and saved user ID (SUID). The RUID is always inherited from the user or process that executes the process. The EUID is normally the same as the RUID but can differ in special circumstances. It is the EUID that BSD checks to determine permissions. The SUID is used by BSD to enable a privileged process to switch in and out of privileged mode.
Industry:Software; Computer
A specific type of event within an event class (for example, a mouse-down event). Compare event class.
Industry:Software; Computer
A self-contained part of a product. A product can have one or more components. The Mac OS X file system contains special locations for several types of components. For example, application binaries are placed in Application directories, plug-ins are housed in Plugin directories, fonts live in Fonts directories, and so on.
Industry:Software; Computer
A server that has access to a store of authentication information and that can authenticate users. For example, an authentication server might verify a user’s identity by prompting the user for a name and password and comparing that information to the names and passwords in a database. In Kerberos authentication, the authentication server also looks up the user’s private key, generates a session key, and creates a TGT. See also ticket-granting server.
Industry:Software; Computer
A file that contains a packaged or unpackaged product. The two container types are disk image and ZIP archive.
Industry:Software; Computer
A first-in-first-out stack where events pertaining to a thread are stored. Each preemptively scheduled thread has its own event queue.
Industry:Software; Computer
The process by which an entity such as a user or a server gets the right to perform a privileged operation. (Authorization can also refer to the right itself, as in “Bob has the authorization to run that program.”) Authorization usually involves first authenticating the entity and then determining whether it has the appropriate permissions. Compare authentication.
Industry:Software; Computer
The file-system directory that contains a project file, the project’s source code and resources, and the build directory.
Industry:Software; Computer
A parameter or field that instructs the Security Server how to proceed with a request. Options include requesting preauthorization, requesting partial authorization, appending rights, and interacting with the user.
Industry:Software; Computer