output capability - significado y definición. Qué es output capability
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Qué (quién) es output capability - definición

COMPUTER SECURITY MODEL
Object-capability; Object capability; Object capability model; Object-capability language

Output (economics)         
QUANTITY OF GOODS OR SERVICES PRODUCED IN A GIVEN TIME PERIOD, BY A FIRM, INDUSTRY, OR COUNTRY, WHETHER CONSUMED OR USED FOR FURTHER PRODUCTION
Netput; Economic output
Output in economics is the "quantity of goods or services produced in a given time period, by a firm, industry, or country",Alan Deardorff. output, Deardorff asspoo's Glossary of International Economics.
Output device         
  • A recording setup with two monitor speakers
  • upright=0.6
  • [[Colossal Cave Adventure]] being played on a [[VT100]] terminal
  • upright=0.8
  • A pair of [[computer speaker]]s and a [[subwoofer]] used in a desktop environment
  • An [[LCD monitor]] in use
  • An LED projector
  • Output interfaces on the rear of a graphics card
TYPE OF COMPUTER HARDWARE DEVICE THAT TRANSMITS INFORMATION FROM THE COMPUTER TO THE USER
Graphical output device; Output devices; List of output devices; Output hardware
An output device is any piece of computer hardware equipment which converts information into a human-perceptible form or, historically, into a physical machine-readable form for use with other non-computerized equipment. It can be text, graphics, tactile, audio, or video.
output device         
  • A recording setup with two monitor speakers
  • upright=0.6
  • [[Colossal Cave Adventure]] being played on a [[VT100]] terminal
  • upright=0.8
  • A pair of [[computer speaker]]s and a [[subwoofer]] used in a desktop environment
  • An [[LCD monitor]] in use
  • An LED projector
  • Output interfaces on the rear of a graphics card
TYPE OF COMPUTER HARDWARE DEVICE THAT TRANSMITS INFORMATION FROM THE COMPUTER TO THE USER
Graphical output device; Output devices; List of output devices; Output hardware
<hardware> Electronic or electromechanical equipment connected to a computer and used to transfer data out of the computer in the form of text, images, sounds or other media to a {display screen}, printer, loudspeaker or storage device. Most modern storage devices such as disk drives and {magnetic tape drives} act as both input and output devices, others such as CD-ROM are input only. (1997-03-18)

Wikipedia

Object-capability model

The object-capability model is a computer security model. A capability describes a transferable right to perform one (or more) operations on a given object. It can be obtained by the following combination:

  • An unforgeable reference (in the sense of object references or protected pointers) that can be sent in messages.
  • A message that specifies the operation to be performed.

The security model relies on not being able to forge references.

  • Objects can interact only by sending messages on references.
  • A reference can be obtained by:
  1. Initial conditions: In the initial state of the computational world being described, object A may already have a reference to object B.
  2. Parenthood: If A creates B, at that moment A obtains the only reference to the newly created B.
  3. Endowment: If A creates B, B is born with that subset of A's references with which A chose to endow it.
  4. Introduction: If A has references to both B and C, A can send to B a message containing a reference to C. B can retain that reference for subsequent use.

In the object-capability model, all computation is performed following the above rules.

Advantages that motivate object-oriented programming, such as encapsulation or information hiding, modularity, and separation of concerns, correspond to security goals such as least privilege and privilege separation in capability-based programming.

The object-capability model was first proposed by Jack Dennis and Earl C. Van Horn in 1966.