timeout


timeout

[′tīm‚au̇t] (control systems) A test of the reliability of robotic software in which the robot is halted if a portion of software does not function properly until the problem is corrected.

timeout

A period of time after which an error condition is raised ifsome event has not occured. A common example is sending amessage. If the receiver does not acknowledge the messagewithin some preset timeout period, a transmission error isassumed to have occured.

timeout

In communications, the intentional ending of an incomplete task. If an acknowledgment, carrier, logon, etc., has not occurred in a specified amount of time, the timeout ends the waiting loop so that the request can be retransmitted or the process terminated. Timeouts are common in communications applications in order to free up a line or port that is tied up with a request that has not been answered in a reasonable amount of time. For each type of situation, there is a default length of time before the timeout is initiated, which typically can be adjusted by the user or network administrator. See tickle packet.