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1 TRANSMISSION CONTROL PROTOCOL / INTERNET PROTOCOL (TCP/IP) K. PALANIVEL Systems Analyst, Computer Centre Pondicherry University, Puducherry –

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Presentation on theme: "1 TRANSMISSION CONTROL PROTOCOL / INTERNET PROTOCOL (TCP/IP) K. PALANIVEL Systems Analyst, Computer Centre Pondicherry University, Puducherry –"— Presentation transcript:

1 1 TRANSMISSION CONTROL PROTOCOL / INTERNET PROTOCOL (TCP/IP) K. PALANIVEL Systems Analyst, Computer Centre Pondicherry University, Puducherry – 605014. LECTURE 3 COMS 525: TCPIP COURSE TOPIC

2 TOPICS TO BE COVERED TCPIP Layered Architecture Functions Layered Communications Different Views of Layers Encapsulation and Demultiplexing Summary

3 Why TCP/IP is so popular? TCP/IP was developed very early Technologies were widely discussed and circulated in documents called “Request for Comments” (RFC) – free of charge Supported by UNIX operating system

4 4 TCP/IP Model Because TCP/IP was developed earlier than the OSI 7- layer mode, it does not have 7 layers but only 4 layers OSI 7-layer TCP/IP Protocol Suite FTP, SMTP, Telnet, HTTP,… TCP, UDP IP, ARP, ICMP Network Interface

5 TCP/IP Model Application Layer Application programs using the network Transport Layer (TCP/UDP) Management of end-to-end message transmission, error detection and error correction Network Layer (IP) Handling of datagrams : routing and congestion Data Link Layer Management of cost effective and reliable data delivery, access to physical networks Physical Layer Physical Media

6 6 Application layer protocols define the rules when implementing specific network applications Rely on the underlying layers to provide accurate and efficient data delivery Typical protocols: FTP – File Transfer Protocol For file transfer Telnet – Remote terminal protocol For remote login on any other computer on the network SMTP – Simple Mail Transfer Protocol For mail transfer HTTP – Hypertext Transfer Protocol For Web browsing Application Layer Protocols

7 7 TCP/IP is built on “connectionless” technology, each datagram finds its own way to its destination Transport Layer protocols define the rules of Dividing a chunk of data into segments Reassemble segments into the original chunk Typical protocols: TCP – Transmission Control Protocol Provide further the functions such as reordering and data resend UDP – User Datagram Service Use when the message to be sent fit exactly into a datagram Use also when a more simplified data format is required Transport Layer Protocols

8 8 Network layer protocols define the rules of how to find the routes for a packet to the destination It only gives best effort delivery. Packets can be delayed, corrupted, lost, duplicated, out-of-order Typical protocols: IP – Internet Protocol Provide packet delivery ARP – Address Resolution Protocol Define the procedures of network address / MAC address translation ICMP – Internet Control Message Protocol Define the procedures of error message transfer Network Layer Protocols

9 9 Encapsulation and Demultiplexing

10 TCP/IP Protocol Suite The TCP/IP protocol suite is the protocol architecture of the Internet The TCP/IP suite has four layers: Application, Transport, Network, and Data Link Layer End systems (hosts) implement all four layers. Gateways (Routers) only have the bottom two layers. 10

11 Functions of the Layers Data Link Layer: – Service: Reliable transfer of frames over a link Media Access Control on a LAN – Functions: Framing, media access control, error checking Network Layer: – Service: Move packets from source host to destination host – Functions: Routing, addressing Transport Layer: – Service: Delivery of data between hosts – Functions: Connection establishment/termination, error control, flow control Application Layer: – Service: Application specific (delivery of email, retrieval of HTML documents, reliable transfer of file) – Functions: Application specific 11

12 TCP/IP Suite and OSI Reference Model 12 The TCP/IP protocol stack does not define the lower layers of a complete protocol stack

13 13 Assignment of Protocols to Layers

14 Layered Communications An entity of a particular layer can only communicate with: 1.a peer layer entity using a common protocol (Peer Protocol) 2.adjacent layers to provide services and to receive services 14

15 Layered Communications A layer N+1 entity sees the lower layers only as a service provider Service Provider N+1 Layer Entity N+1 Layer Peer Protocol Request Delivery Indicate Delivery

16 Service Access Points A service user accesses services of the service provider at Service Access Points (SAPs) A SAP has an address that uniquely identifies where the service can be accessed 16

17 Exchange of Data The unit of data send between peer entities is called a Protocol Data Unit (PDU) For now, let us think of a PDU as a single packet Scenario: Layer-N at A sends a layer-N PDU to layer-N at B What actually happens: – A’s layer-N passes the PDU to one the SAPs at layer-N-1 – Layer-N-1 entity at A constructs its own (layer-N-1) PDU which it sends to the layer-N-1 entity at B – PDU at layer-N-1 = layer-N-1 Header + layer –N PDU AB

18 18 Exchange of Data AB

19 Layers in the Example

20 20 Layers in the Example Send HTTP Request to neon Establish a connection to 128.143.71.21 at port 80 Open TCP connection to 128.143.71.21 port 80 Send a datagram (which contains a connection request) to 128.143.71.21 Send IP datagram to 128.143.71.21 Send the datagram to 128.143.137.1 Send Ethernet frame to 00:e0:f9:23:a8:20 Send Ethernet frame to 00:20:af:03:98:28 Send IP data-gram to 128.143.71.21 Send the datagram to 128.143.7.21 Frame is an IP datagram IP datagram is a TCP segment for port 80

21 Layers and Services Service provided by TCP to HTTP: ◦ reliable transmission of data over a logical connection Service provided by IP to TCP: ◦ unreliable transmission of IP datagrams across an IP network Service provided by Ethernet to IP: ◦ transmission of a frame across an Ethernet segment Other services: ◦ DNS: translation between domain names and IP addresses ◦ ARP: Translation between IP addresses and MAC addresses 21

22 Encapsulation and Demultiplexing

23 As data is moving down the protocol stack, each protocol is adding layer-specific control information 23

24 Encapsulation and Demultiplexing Let us look in detail at the Ethernet frame between Argon and the Router, which contains the TCP connection request to Neon. This is the frame in hexadecimal notation. 00e0 f923 a820 00a0 2471 e444 0800 4500 002c 9d08 4000 8006 8bff 808f 8990 808f 4715 065b 0050 0009 465b 0000 0000 6002 2000 598e 0000 0204 05b4 24

25 Parsing the information in the frame 25

26 26 Encapsulation and Demultiplexing: Ethernet Header

27 27

28 28 Encapsulation and Demultiplexing: IP Header

29 29 Encapsulation and Demultiplexing: Ethernet Header

30 30 Option: maximum segment size Encapsulation and Demultiplexing: TCP Header

31 Encapsulation and Demultiplexing: Ethernet Header

32 No Application Data in this frame Encapsulation and Demultiplexing: Application Data

33 Different Views of Networking

34 Different Layers of the protocol stack have a different view of the network. This is HTTP’s and TCP’s view of the network. 34

35 35 Network View of IP Protocol

36 Network View of Ethernet Ethernet’s view of the network

37 Questions? 37


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