An example of this is cloud storage, where remote files are presented as if they were locally accessible; also the cloud computing where the resource in question is the processing.
From English: network transparency.
X Windows
The term is often applied partially correctly in the context of the X Windows system, which is capable of transmitting graphic data over the network and integrating it seamlessly with the applications that are running and displayed locally; however, certain extensions of the X Windows system are not able to work on the network.
Firewall
In firewall technology, transparency can be defined in the network layer ( or IP) or in the application layer (See: OSI model).
Transparency in the IP layer means that the client is directed to the real IP address of the server.If a connection is not transparent, then the client is directed to an intermediate host, which could be a proxy or a cache server.
The transparency of the IP layer can also be defined from the server's point of view.If the connection is transparent, the server sees the IP of the real client.If it is not transparent, the server sees the IP of an intermediate host.
Databases
In centralized database systems, the The only available resource that needs to be protected from the user is the data (that is, the storage system).
In a distributed DBMS, a second resource needs to be managed mostly in the same way: the network.Preferably, the user should be protected from the operational details of the network.Then there would be no difference between databases that run centrally from those running in a distributed system.transparency is called distribution transparency.
From the perspective of the database management system (DBMS), distribution transparency requires that users do not have to specify where the data is located.
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