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Northbound interface
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In computer networking and computer architecture, a northbound interface of a component is an interface that allows the component to communicate with a higher level component, using the latter component's southbound interface.
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The northbound interface conceptualizes the lower level details (e.g., data or functions) used by, or in, the component, allowing the component to interface with higher level layers.[1]
In architectural overviews, the northbound interface is normally drawn at the top of the component it is defined in; hence the name northbound interface.
A southbound interface decomposes concepts in the technical details, mostly specific to a single component of the architecture.
Southbound interfaces are drawn at the bottom of an architectural overview.
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Typical use
A northbound interface is typically an output-only interface (as opposed to one that accepts user input) found in carrier-grade network and telecommunications network elements.
The languages or protocols commonly used include SNMP and TL1.
For example, a device that is capable of sending out syslog messages but that is not configurable by the user is said to implement a northbound interface.
Other examples include SMASH, IPMI, WSMAN, and SOAP.
The term is also important for software-defined networking (SDN), to facilitate communication between the physical devices, the SDN software and applications running on the network.[2]
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References
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