Reverse Address Resolution Protocol
(RARP) A protocol defined in RFC 903 which provides the reverse function of ARP. RARP maps a hardware address (MAC address) to an IP address. It is used primarily by diskless nodes, when they first initialise, to find their IP address.
See also BOOTP.Last updated: 1994-12-08
Reverse ARP
Reverse Address Resolution Protocolreverse engineering
The process of analysing an existing system to identify its components and their interrelationships and create representations of the system in another form or at a higher level of abstraction. Reverse engineering is usually undertaken in order to redesign the system for better maintainability or to produce a copy of a system without access to the design from which it was originally produced.
For example, one might take the executable code of a computer program, run it to study how it behaved with different inputs and then attempt to write a program which behaved identically (or better). An integrated circuit might also be reverse engineered by an unscrupulous company wishing to make unlicensed copies of a popular chip.Last updated: 1995-10-06
Reverse Polish Notation
postfix notationreverse polish syntax
postfix notationNearby terms:
reuse ♦ Reverse Address Resolution Protocol ♦ Reverse ARP ♦ reverse engineering
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