IID

(redirected from Instance Identifier)
Category filter:
AcronymDefinition
IIDImperial Irrigation District (California)
IIDIf in Doubt
IIDIgnition Interlock Device (automotive security system)
IIDInvention, Innovation and Design (Malaysia)
IIDInspector Identification
IIDInterface Identifier
IIDInstruction Identification
IIDIncident Identification
IIDInstance Identifier
IIDImage Identification
IIDInterface Identifier (Component Object Model)
IIDIndependent & Identically Distributed (statistics)
IIDInternational Institute for Democracy (est. 1987)
IIDImperial Institute of Design (India)
IIDIntegrated Infrastructure Development
IIDIndian Institute of Development
IIDImprovised Incendiary Device
IIDInstitute for Interreligious Dialogue
IIDInformation for Investment Decisions, Inc.
IIDInfinite Improbability Drive (Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams)
IIDInternal Investigations Division (law enforcement; various locations)
IIDIterative Incremental Development
IIDInternal Iterative Deepening (chess programming technique)
IIDInsulin Independent Diabetes
IIDInstituto de Investigación de Diabetes (Spanish: Diabetes Research Institute)
IIDIntegrated Information Display
IIDIntegrated Interoperability Demonstration
IIDIndian Institute of Design (New Delhi, India)
IIDInfrared Intrusion Detection
Copyright 1988-2018 AcronymFinder.com, All rights reserved.
References in periodicals archive ?
Here, instanceID is the running instance identifier, and each running instance has a unique identifier that corresponds with the IP address and port number of the deployment node.
Then, we analyze the IP address and port information of the local and destination hosts and make them correspond with the running instance identifier, replacing the original parameters of system calls with the running instance identifier, as shown in Fig.
For example, for the first detection read out {connect(1),G,2}, the type identifier of its application is G (get-ticket client), and the current running instance identifier is 2.
The first column will contain the instance identifier, and the second column a value.
A second approach to representing properties is to maintain each instance as a list, consisting of the instance identifier, followed by the properties the instances possesses.
In the distributed case, a client may use the group identifier to identify the server handling the particular object of interest and subsequently use the instance identifier for the particular server, avoiding multicast to the group on every operation.