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What is a Server? (Deepdive) 

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With this video I explain my ~17y/o self what a "Server" is. We look at server software and servers in datacenters to understand how the word is used.
Chapters:
00:00 - Intro to "What is a Server?"
00:47 - Wikipedia Server Definition
01:42 - Game Servers
02:50 - Client and Server Communication
04:30 - Web Servers
05:10 - A Server is just a Program
06:38 - A Server is just a Computer
08:30 - Server Hardware
10:10 - What is Server Software?
11:54 - Servers are Everywhere
14:00 - Related Terms and Thought Experiment
17:04 - Outro
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25 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 400   
@AJMansfield1
@AJMansfield1 Год назад
Another fun example is a linux display server (like X11): it's a program that has a screen it can display things on and a mouse and keyboard it can read from; graphical programs then connect to it as clients via something like dbus to ask for those inputs and tell it what to display.
@emblemi6345
@emblemi6345 Год назад
X11 clients usually connect via abstract unix sockets. Also if you run graphical programs on a rented 'server' over ssh, your desktop is the server here in X11 context. This is a typical master-slave setting where xorg-server is the master.
@peacefulexistence_
@peacefulexistence_ Год назад
DBus is not involved in Xorg/X11. A client (eg. a window manager, a compositor, a status bar, or just a regular application) connects to the X11 socket/port and talks with the server (Xorg) using the X11 protocol, usually using either Xlib or XCB to abstract the communication. The protocol also facilitates IPC, using Window properties and other things, specified in ICCCM (overall communication), EWMH (communication between normal apps and the WM), or various other freedesktop specs, for stuff like clipboard, systray, embedding windows in each other, and more.
@billy.n2813
@billy.n2813 Год назад
Thank you! I was always confused by this.
@Henry-sv3wv
@Henry-sv3wv Год назад
x11 is the old stuff, wayland is the new
@MegaManNeo
@MegaManNeo Год назад
Simplifying computer terms in easy explanations is something I am always up for. It's too easy to confuse people and make them lose interest (probably part of the reason why hubs, MODEMs and WiFi access points are combo devices nowadays). I'd welcome more videos like this.
@kristiyanivanov7414
@kristiyanivanov7414 Год назад
Routers for the win! haha.
@Henry-sv3wv
@Henry-sv3wv Год назад
why would i want 3 devices in 1 if i can pay more money for power bill when each one has its own power supply ...
@illusions66
@illusions66 Год назад
yk what the first part where u say to think of a server like a restaurant waiter actually helped alot
@Makbetjuz
@Makbetjuz Год назад
I had quite a big struggle understanding what is a protocol and how are packets built. "Language that computers communicate" did not cut it for me. If you want to make a similar video I would love to watch a deep dive on this topic.
@hb20007
@hb20007 Год назад
Btw, he made the video: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-d-zn-wv4Di8.html
@Makbetjuz
@Makbetjuz Год назад
@@hb20007 Yeah I saw! Nice to know that viewer input is being considered.
@CallousCoder
@CallousCoder Год назад
Just a serious question: “isn’t this taught in college anymore? A protocol is just a serious of steps that unify a process, so that there’s the same way of doing something and interoperability is guaranteed.” Creating a packet is of course specific to CS, and depends on where ik the OSI model you are implementing it. A TCP packet is different from for example a abstract HTTP protocol is an application protocol. For example IP is a network protocol and each are implemented differently. Network protocols themselves lay on top of data link protocols (basically describing how the data needs to be send into a network card, you have to Ethernet network cards, but also token ring or these days your DSL modem. Your NIC driver basically translates your network protocol (IP) into a data link protocol. And that hardware communicates again with a physical agreed upon protocol. So how to implement it really depends on where you are in your OSI stack. It can be as trivial as just reading whole lines or even single chats via stdin and stdout. To ask complex as actually toggling physical bit on and off in a set time. On my channel I have a video called “Fixing climate change the hacker way”. I reverse engineer a weather station protocol and spoof it using just and Arduino that toggled a single hit that enabled disables a little transmitter. That is the lowest level of protocol execution- just toggling single but on and off.
@jsonkody
@jsonkody 2 месяца назад
protocol is EXACTLY that .. what the word mean. You made protocol by that you made up some rules how to write some information or do some actions. For example lets say "You need to knock on the door three times, then I shoud 'come in!' and then you may come in" and by agreeing on that we created a protocol, by those rules if you knock only two times I wont shout 'come in!' and you cant go in. Of course in real life you may just come in but then it's not by the protocol and unexpected things may happen .. lets update the protocol "If you just go in without knocking, I kick you in the butt" :D
@nickguerra8460
@nickguerra8460 Год назад
Thank You! I have been a programmer for a few years now and these "basic" terms often have so many subtle complexities that videos like this help a lot. Please keep making videos like this!
@jona7674
@jona7674 Год назад
Really enjoyed this kind of video! Please keep up the series. The gradual change from solid basic information to more technical details was really informative!
@ahnospell44
@ahnospell44 Год назад
This is a GREAT introduction to how it works, you left quite an awesome bit of 'your own research needed here' but explained amazing for someone coming into the world of IT!
@danielakhterov
@danielakhterov Год назад
What a fantastic deep dive, thank you!
@borazan
@borazan Год назад
Funny that I literally asked a professor this after class yesterday, his answer was "pretty much everything can be a server". I guess the confusion arises from the fact that it doesn't only refer to specific types of computers/software but to much more. Thank you for the deep dive, really appreciate it :)
@sergiojimenez4595
@sergiojimenez4595 Год назад
Awesome video! Doing the videos that you wish you had when you were younger makes for a really interesting and usefull format. It is also motivating to see that you once also had essential misconceptions about certain "basic" topics and that there is nothing wrong with that. The worst thing that one can do is to not ask that "silly" question and remain ignorant. Keep it up!
@dudu8009
@dudu8009 Год назад
you're really amazing, the video is quality made and the explanations are so understandable. thank you for helping the world learn and making it so enjoyable at the same time!
@AwsmBuff
@AwsmBuff Год назад
Really good work at covering this topic from different angles!
@fanden
@fanden Год назад
This is awesome. I can´t tell you how often I catch myself not being able to truly explain the most simple stuff in IT after using it for +10years.
@heyitsalec
@heyitsalec 11 месяцев назад
This was an awesome video! Proof that even the more simpler subject areas can be just as enlightening. Thanks for this!
@mipselled840
@mipselled840 Год назад
how'd this get in my recommended? EDIT: I was just surprised an unlisted video got in my recommendation when it had only 2 views. I’m already subscribed and I watch all of LiveOverflow’s videos.
@lucutz_1
@lucutz_1 Год назад
It is great content. That's why.
@ringzero3260
@ringzero3260 Год назад
Why not?
@sakari_119
@sakari_119 Год назад
This guy does hacking into minecarft and understanding how hacks work videos
@MirageX47
@MirageX47 Год назад
Subscribe to him he's damn good, i learnt so much stuff from him back then
@spacemule1
@spacemule1 Год назад
Quality
@ricp
@ricp Месяц назад
This is so great! I love the level of detail you go into, thanks a lot!
@yassinsammy7359
@yassinsammy7359 Год назад
finally a good explanation about servers, I had that question for a really long time, mostly because of all the ways people explain stuff, everyone explains it differently, and it becomes extremely difficult to understand what is what and which is which. Thanks for the video, and keep up the good videos they definitely help a lot.
@WillBosch-Vuononen
@WillBosch-Vuononen 3 месяца назад
This video is perfect for someone like me: the one who has used computer for more than half of their life but still get confused with all the terms. Thank you so much!
@jigerjain
@jigerjain Год назад
You have an incredible approach of explaining details. Glad you made this ❤
@paul1337x
@paul1337x 11 месяцев назад
As a long time windows and Linux administrator, I want to tell you that your video is awesome! 👍 Good explanations, even better illustrations and best of all, personally, metaphors.
@juliasteam2077
@juliasteam2077 Год назад
Great video, looking at the meaning of a word sometimes works better than looking at the technical definition.
@char8169
@char8169 Год назад
This video was really helpful! There needs to be more explanations like this that people with less experience are able to understand.
@rikschaaf
@rikschaaf Год назад
You also used the term service. If you want to tie that into the explanation, I would define it as this: A *_server_* is a *_program/application_* that *_provides_* a *_service_* by sending a *_response_* to a *_client_* application that sent a *_request_* , so that the client can then *_consume_* this response. What the request and the response contain depend on the service that the server provides. This application can be called a server, but it is also often called a service. The hardware can be called a server, but is usually not called a service, except in the context of Infrastructure As A Service (IAAS), where your hardware is managed for you by a 3rd party, e.g. an (other) company (like a mincraft server host) or even a different department within the same company (which makes it possible for a development team to run their program somewhere in the company, without having to manage those computers themselves). Here the service refers to the management and availability of those computers, not necessarily to the computers themselves. The term service is also used within the code of a program itself. For instance, some piece of code might need access to a database. To do this, it can call a service (another piece of code within the same program) that handles the database access. In this context you might also see the terms *_manager_* or *_repository_*
@NickKartha
@NickKartha Год назад
Stop giving the rent owners more reason to ask for rent. Don't study his definition, kids. Not all of are Peter Parker, most of us are the tubbies from Wall-E.
@rikschaaf
@rikschaaf Год назад
@@NickKartha wha? There's probably some comedy in here, but I am completely missing what you even mean...
@NickKartha
@NickKartha Год назад
@@rikschaaf Peter Parker pays his rent by means of even self exploitation. When one says they are providing a service, this entails monetary compensation. There are businesses that thrive on providing you a server and some dirty cpanel experience in exchange for premium lunch money. These services should not exist in the modern world as we are moving to web3 and the metaverse with further p2p and ipfs resources. As tubbies, we the low grade consumer, can do nothing about this "democratization" that happens without our participation. Hope this explains it.
@solar9137
@solar9137 Год назад
i agree
@Nelo390
@Nelo390 Год назад
​@@NickKartha you... don't want servers... and you think meta of all people will stop that?
@quentinlauterbach
@quentinlauterbach Год назад
I really like the video format and the idea behind it therefore i would enjoy to see you explain more common words/concepts :) (like networking. Which was one of the main things i always wanted to know how it works until i had it in Uni)
@user-xv6cj1gl8w
@user-xv6cj1gl8w Год назад
2:31 Exactly! As an ICT student, first thing i have been taught is "throw away the mindset that a server is anything special" being a "server" can be temporary, for example a client working as a minecraft server, there are purpose-built machines for it, but a server is just any host that shares their resources or service. the "status" of any host can be both client and server depending on what it is doing at the particular time
@bananarambo8163
@bananarambo8163 Год назад
Thank you master, you're really talented. Hope to see more of this deepdive series
@Dymond_in_the_ski
@Dymond_in_the_ski 2 месяца назад
Thank you for this video. I felt how you felt when you were 17 years old. Currently learning configuration management and I was experiencing some sort of mental block then i decided to break down terms. Especially the server / web server that i thought I already know the meaning of. I truly appreciate this video, your 17 year old self and this lady is happy.
@someperson9895
@someperson9895 Год назад
Wow! Just when I started diving into networking and net security, too! Thank you, you've taught me so much.
@osbaldotheVtenman
@osbaldotheVtenman Год назад
This is a fantastic video! Thank you soo much 🙏
@dominikeins
@dominikeins Год назад
Amazing video! Thank you for putting complex things into digestible pieces
@shoshysam6355
@shoshysam6355 Год назад
Great video man! Keep up the good work!
@mrobvious6112
@mrobvious6112 Год назад
Man.. I love this guy, he explains in a better way
@accumulator4825
@accumulator4825 Год назад
Incredible explanation, thank you very much! Really needed this
@ShaorongMa
@ShaorongMa Год назад
This video really helps! Many thanks!
@pannas4069
@pannas4069 Год назад
Nicely explained. Really good job!
@anamoly01
@anamoly01 Год назад
The best thing i like about this video is that it starts as beginner and then impressively level up after 50% duration for most advanced concept too. 👏
@Zedoy
@Zedoy Год назад
This was super helpful thanks so much!!! ❤️❤️
@saksham01
@saksham01 Год назад
Last part was cool. Good video
@Filaxsan
@Filaxsan Год назад
Incredibly done brother. Thanks a lot for sharing!
@user-ws7wh8kz8h
@user-ws7wh8kz8h Месяц назад
Great Job. I'm new to all this, and you made it easy for me to understand.
@saggitariusA
@saggitariusA Год назад
Nice explanation. I also had this question over server being referred to both program and machine. So this clears it up. Thanx
@gurshehzadsingh5209
@gurshehzadsingh5209 Год назад
Best video for server explanation on this planet. 🔥
@rickmens6110
@rickmens6110 Год назад
wooowowowo this is so informative. Nice work keep it coming
@amjadcp4509
@amjadcp4509 9 месяцев назад
The best explanation that I have heard ever about server:)
@mohammadalaaelghamry8010
@mohammadalaaelghamry8010 Год назад
Amazing as usual.
@severtone263
@severtone263 7 месяцев назад
Bravo! Best explanation yet! Thank you
@franciscolopez2736
@franciscolopez2736 Год назад
Have had this question on my mind for a while, this is perfect ❤️
@kiwi2257
@kiwi2257 Год назад
These videos are absolutely brilliant. Cheers for all of this really great information.
@jony1661
@jony1661 Год назад
This is extremely relevant to my studies, thanks!
@AmirHosseinHonardust
@AmirHosseinHonardust Год назад
I'm a backend developer, and a good one at that. My job is to write web servers all day. Yet, most of the contents of this video were either new to me or I have just learned implicitly through experience. Very nice video!
@syedbarkath6960
@syedbarkath6960 Год назад
Continue these types of videos... its very helpful
@user-hk9tm2gi4s
@user-hk9tm2gi4s Год назад
So well explained !
@logiciananimal
@logiciananimal Год назад
In order to do better data security with people I have to explain client/server computing approaches. It is always good to have a very simple and effective introduction to the topic. It looks like the video is promising in that regard. I'll let everyone know how it goes once I use it!
@coderaven1107
@coderaven1107 Год назад
How did it go?
@MrJrhzues
@MrJrhzues 5 месяцев назад
this is beautiful...humbly thank you.
@JayadityaSethi
@JayadityaSethi 20 дней назад
Fabulous, thanks for sharing!
@xfregas2682
@xfregas2682 Год назад
this video is SO GOOD. I will send it to all my friends who begin to learn Computer science!
@joshuadeleeuw
@joshuadeleeuw Год назад
thanks alot for this video, this genuinly helped me (an almost 27 year old) out alot with naming my programs, now i can finally standardize my program namingscemes a bit more.
@mentaal.4066
@mentaal.4066 Год назад
Amazing explanation!
@Bchicken2
@Bchicken2 Год назад
Great video, I'm a student experiencing the same question in my mind all the time. Thank you for the explanation!
@prottentogo
@prottentogo 4 месяца назад
man, you're really good at explaining things. got a little too confusing for me personally after the socket thing, but that's me.
@kiwiwelch3620
@kiwiwelch3620 Год назад
It toke me a long time to understand its concept as well, thanks for validating me
@cafecito6068
@cafecito6068 Год назад
Loving this
@user-nb2yt4np5e
@user-nb2yt4np5e 3 месяца назад
You've answered my question and I'm aware of the term server . Thanks much.
@uzumakiuchiha7678
@uzumakiuchiha7678 4 месяца назад
this was very good. thank you for making it more clear for me
@tanmaybhayani
@tanmaybhayani Год назад
More of this series please!
@headlights-go-up
@headlights-go-up Год назад
I love the way you explain things.
@ekapam
@ekapam Год назад
Well explained, I like this kind of videos, and I think we can simplify it as an Input and Output, no matter if there's an imperative or functional program, there are actions after any request from both sides. 👍
@ivanstukalov9589
@ivanstukalov9589 Год назад
This video approves that every though guy, who seems absolute expert is just an ordinary man with simple questions. But everyone can reach high excellence if he dont give exploring. I admire your content! Good Luck, Liveoverflow!
@mady3795
@mady3795 4 месяца назад
this is such great video, thank you so much.
@bluefire9016
@bluefire9016 Год назад
Absolutely love this video. I will no longer feel intimidated when I here the word server in the office.
@Shhluger
@Shhluger Год назад
I am struggling every day with trying to understand the things related to programming I am giving up easily, such materials bringing back my willingness to try one more time. Thank you for excellent explanation.
@iBarnieBarnie
@iBarnieBarnie Год назад
Thanks this is awesome!
@nikhilanand354
@nikhilanand354 6 месяцев назад
Nice Explanation sir !!!
@marekr.9339
@marekr.9339 Год назад
Simple but necessary and useful video, when I was teen everyone who was older than me speaking about server, and I was trying figure out what the hell they talking about.
@0xirakli
@0xirakli Год назад
Great video really clears everything up
@osaeljm
@osaeljm Год назад
I liked this video, I went back in time….. really nice, remember those basic but essential concepts are always useful 🎉
@Skyb0rg
@Skyb0rg Год назад
I think it may also be useful to note a usage of sockets that doesn’t fit the behavior of “server client”, showing that the two are very different. Otherwise amazing video, and I can’t wait to see more.
@Shadowtrot
@Shadowtrot Год назад
This video is great. I used to be confused about the term as well but the more I interact with it the more I learn that so many things in the "tech sphere" are things that I already knew and interact with daily and have some understanding of, just with slightly more different descriptions of their purpose or implementations. I kind of hate that computers are seen as this mysterious black box when so many aspects of them are just simple concepts we already know, but they're implemented in an unfamiliar way. I like to think about questions like this and answer them in a way that's more relatable to the general human experience, and when I was clicking on the video I was thinking to myself how I would answer the question, landing on the same initial answer as you, like a waiter/server at a restaurant that takes requests and provides a service or response in the form of food.
@paulla7429
@paulla7429 Год назад
Great video, really cleared it up for me
@terryhorlick679
@terryhorlick679 Год назад
I loved this video. I sort of followed along and was impressed with your reverse engineering. My computer knowledge is very rudimentary starting when I was an undergrad at U.C.S.D.! Back then we used a Burroughs B6700 machine which took up the first floor of Building A on Muir campus. I still remember (note I did not say fondly) punching cards as I built a compiler for my computer class. I learned a lesson from a fellow dorm student who figured out how to get control and breach the system. A “clever” line of text inserted onto all printout headers quickly lead the department to shut B6700 down until the student was apprehended and interrogated. This forced the implementation of security advances and one deserved expulsion. All his fellow students can now explain how that one was done since 50 years is far past the statute of limitations. Since you are familiar with Giesel you may be surprised that back in the first 10 years of UCSD it was known as “Central Library” which had no computing ability. All computation was there in building A at the “liberal arts college” Muir College. I suggest changing the coding a bit and boost the census numbers by multiplying the area counted by a factor of 10 or 100. Maybe you get more money for the English department if the Romance Novel stacks suddenly show 300 or 3000 visits instead of a daily census of 3!
@JustJeris
@JustJeris Год назад
Great video! Would love to see similar style explanation on network ports!
@JustMe-gg7dy
@JustMe-gg7dy Год назад
Nice explanation. Keep going.
@shadowcrafter01
@shadowcrafter01 Год назад
Thanks for the video. I know most of it already or had a good concept of it but still was helpful and definitely learned something
@raqmet
@raqmet Год назад
Great video!
@itaybarok9405
@itaybarok9405 Год назад
Great Video!
@solar9137
@solar9137 Год назад
that was a great explanation of servers
@maureenmuiruri6591
@maureenmuiruri6591 3 месяца назад
Thank you for this, I was struggling to understand servers and clients definitions.
@nevinkuser9892
@nevinkuser9892 Год назад
Amazing video man! Well done! It really explained a lot. I also love the analogy to a restaurant server. I will go install linux now. 🥳
@techmoon_
@techmoon_ 4 месяца назад
Quality content. Thanks
@caretchara
@caretchara Год назад
You are a great teacher.
@Jonathang5730
@Jonathang5730 Год назад
Great Explanation! I also didn't know what a 'server' was for a long time. It's just computer, that's beefed up to stay online 24/7.
@aze4308
@aze4308 Год назад
Great video! Thanks so much!
@case_sensitive
@case_sensitive Год назад
More of these technical explanations would be great
@augurelite
@augurelite Год назад
REALLY good video thanks
@thomasqkelly
@thomasqkelly Год назад
Loved the video
@AR-sj1yl
@AR-sj1yl Год назад
Thank you so much Brother❤️
@mohammadalihanfi8237
@mohammadalihanfi8237 Год назад
Best explaination of server ever
@hasbullaboren7720
@hasbullaboren7720 Год назад
Thanks man nice video very informative
@melvin6228
@melvin6228 Год назад
I also asked myself the same question. My answer (super quickly): A server is a role that a program on a computer plays. It serves certain forms of data that the client is requesting. A client is also a role that a program on a computer plays. Aaannd now I'll watch the video :D
@asantoshkumarachary2692
@asantoshkumarachary2692 Год назад
To be very honest, I had the same question in my mind. The main question I had was why we call a computer a server when it is just another computer? Now I got the answer. Thank you.
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