| Socolofsky, T., and C. Kale, "TCP/IP Tutorial", RFC 1180, Spider Systems Ltd., January 1991. |
....containing both network and host address. How much of the address is used for the network portion and how much for the host portion varies from network to network. IP addressing An IP address is 32 bits wide, and as discussed, it is composed of two parts: the network number, and the host number [1, 2, 3]. By convention, it is expressed as four decimal numbers separated by periods, such as 200.1.2.3 representing the decimal value of each of the four bytes. Valid addresses thus range from 0.0.0.0 to 255.255.255.255, a total of about 4.3 billion addresses. The first few bits of the address ....
....address by showing it in red. Suppose that A wanted to send a packet to C for the first time, and that it knows C s IP address. To send this packet over Ethernet, A would need to know C s Ethernet address. The Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) is used for the dynamic discovery of these addresses [1]. ARP keeps an internal table of IP address and corresponding Ethernet address. When A attempts to send the IP packet destined to C, the ARP module does a lookup in its table on C s IP address and will discover no entry. ARP will then broadcast a special request packet over the Ethernet segment, ....
T. Socolofsky, C. Kale, "A TCP/IP Tutorial", RFC 1180, 01/15/1991.
....links, such as a wireless mobile link. 4.1 TCP IP TCP is a reliable transport protocol for the Internet. TCP is designed to ensure that the transmitted data reaches its destination without error. It also controls the transmission rate, based on feedback signals from the destination host [2, 49, 55, 58]. The common re ection one makes about TCP in a wireless environment, is that TCP was designed for high bandwidth, short delay, congestion limited networks, and is not well suited for high loss, high delay, error limited links. The meaning of this is that the ow control mechanisms in TCP react ....
T. Socolofsky and C. Kale. A TCP/IP Tutorial. RFC1180, Jan. 1991.
....is necessary and this makes standard solutions in wireless environments even for streaming and MMS very attractive. Video over IP is usually transported either by downloading complete bit streams (MMS) using reliable end to end protocols such as Transmission Control Protocol over IP (TCP IP) [9], or by real time transmission. The latter one applied for conversational or streaming services over 1P networks usually employs 1P [5] on the network layer, User Datagram protocol (UDP) 10] on the transport layer, and real time transport protocol (RTP) 11] and accompanying RTP payload ....
T. Socolofsky and C. Kale, "A TCP/IP Tutorial," RFC 1180, Jan. 1991.
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Socolofsky T., Kale C., A TCP/IP Tutorial, RFC1180, September 1991. 77
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Socolofsky, T., and C. Kale, "TCP/IP Tutorial", RFC 1180, Spider Systems Ltd., January 1991.
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T. Socolofsky. A TCP/IP Tutorial, January 1991. RFC 1180.
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T. Socolofsky and C. Kale, \A TCP/IP tutorial." IETF RFC 1180, 1991.
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