article

In general usage, an overflow occurs when the volume of a substance exceeds the capacity of its intended container. A river in flood, for instance, may "overflow its banks". It is also used in a metaphorical sense, as "overflowing with enthusiasm."

In telecommunication, the term overflow has the following meanings:

1. In telephony, the generation of potential traffic that exceeds the capacity of a communications system or subsystem.

2. In telephony, a count of telephone call attempts made on groups of busy trunks or access lines.

3. In telephony, traffic handled by overflow equipment.

4. In telephony, traffic that exceeds the capacity of the switching equipment and is therefore lost.

5. In telephony, on a particular route, excess traffic that is offered to another route, i.e., an alternate route.

In computing, the term overflow often refers to an arithmetic overflow. It may also refer to a stack overflow, in which a computer program makes too many subroutine calls and its call stack runs out of space.

In digital communications, the condition that exists when the incoming data rate exceeds that which can be accommodated by a buffer, resulting in the loss of information. This gives rise to the phenomenon of the buffer overflow, providing an exploit, a vulnerability allowing unauthorised escalation of privilege escalation on a computer system.

In plumbing, a toilet or sink may overflow, spilling water onto the surrounding area. Many sinks have built-in overflow pipes to drain excess water before it reaches the top.

Overflow is also the name of a popular contemporary christian pop rock band.

References


Überlauf (Hardware) | Overflow

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Overflow".

Home Pageartsbusinesscomputersgameshealthhospitalshomekids & teensnewsphysiciansrecreationreferenceregionalscienceshoppingsocietysportsworld