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Understanding TCP/IP

You're reading from   Understanding TCP/IP A clear and comprehensive guide to TCP/IP protocols

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2006
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781904811718
Length
Edition 1st Edition
Concepts
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Author (1):
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CP Books a.s. CP Books a.s.
Author Profile Icon CP Books a.s.
CP Books a.s.
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Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Network Protocols FREE CHAPTER 2. Network Monitoring Tools 3. Physical Layer 4. Link Layer 5. Internet Protocol 6. IP Address 7. Routing 8. IP Version 6 9. Transmission Control Protocol 10. User Datagram Protocol 11. Domain Name System 12. Telnet 13. File Transfer Protocol 14. Hypertext Transfer Protocol 15. Email 16. Forums 17. Lightweight Directory Access Protocol A. CISCO Routers Index

9.3 Establishing and Terminating a Connection with TCP

The core of IP was the IP datagram description. Since IP is a datagram-oriented (connectionless) service, there was not much of a need to prepare for cases in which the IP datagram was not delivered. At most, IP can signal this status using ICMP. Signaling with ICMP is only done out of good will in IP. In practice, we often run across cases where signaling with ICMP is restricted because it is not desirable, for example, for security reasons.

TCP uses IP for transferring data over the Internet, even though it establishes a reliable stream-oriented service over this protocol. It must solve the problems of establishing and closing a connection, confirming received data, and re-requesting lost data, and also solve problems with keeping the communication paths passable. The TCP segment description is obviously only one small part of TCP. A larger part of the protocol is the description of TCP segment exchange (handshaking) between both ends...

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