TCP and UDP in Computer Network Interoperability

 
TCP & UDP Supplement
Layer 4 – Transport Protocols
 
CECS 474 Computer Network Interoperability
 
Notes for Douglas E. Comer, 
Computer Networks and Internets (5
th
 Edition)
 
Tracy Bradley Maples, Ph.D.
Computer Engineering & Computer Science
California State University, Long Beach
 
The Transport Layer
GOAL:  
The Transport Layer provides
 
logical communication
 between application
processes running on different hosts.
Transport protocols
 run in the end systems (end-to-end)
• The 
sending side
 breaks application messages into segments and passes them
down to the Network layer
• The 
receiving side
 reassembles the segments into messages and passes them up to
the Application layer
 
NOTE
:
The 
Network Layer
 provides logical communication between hosts.
The 
Transport Layer
 provides logical communication between processes.
 
Transport Layer Protocols
 
Two Transport Protocols
 are available for Applications to use on the Internet:
1.
UDP
2.
TCP
UDP (User Datagram Protocol)
 
Provides: 
Unreliable, unordered delivery of segments.
TCP (Transmission Control Protocol)
 
Provides: 
Reliable, in-order delivery of segments.
TCP includes:
Connection set-up (3-way handshake)
Flow Control
Congestion Control
NOTE
:
  
Neither protocol provides:
Delay guarantees
Bandwidth guarantees
 
UDP (User Datagram Protocol)
UDP is:
A “no frills,” “bare bones” Internet Transport protocol
Provides “best effort” service
 
UDP segments may be:
lost
delivered out of order to application
Connectionless
UDP:
has no handshaking between UDP sender, receiver
each UDP segment handled independently of others
 
UDP (User Datagram Protocol) (cont’d)
Since UDP provides so few services, why is there a UDP?
 
1.
UDP has no connection establishment  
=>
So it has lower delay
It is simple (no connection state is need at sender, receiver)
It has a small segment header
2.
UDP has no congestion control  
=>
UDP can blast away as fast as desired
Uses of UDP:
It is often used for streaming multimedia apps, because UDP is:
loss tolerant
rate sensitive
UDP is also used in:
DNS
SNMP
 
TCP (Transmission Control Protocol)
TCP characteristics:
point-to-point connections
one sender, one receiver
full duplex data:
bi-directional data flow in same connection
reliable, in-order 
byte steam 
transmission
with no “message boundaries” between bytes
pipelined transmission
multiple segments are sent at the same time
Maximum segments sent simultaneously = TCP congestion/flow
control window size
send & receive buffers at sender and receiver
connection-oriented:
handshaking occurs between the sender, receiver before data exchange
Uses flow control:
The sender will not overwhelm receiver’s buffer
 
TCP (Transmission Control Protocol) (cont’d)
Conceptual View
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Figure from Kurose & Ross, 
Networking: A Top Down Approach
 
TCP (Transmission Control Protocol) (cont’d)
TCP creates reliable data service on top of IP’s (Layer 3’s) unreliable delivery service.
To make transmission reliable, TCP uses:
pipelined transmission of segments
send & receive buffers at sender and receiver
ACKs (Acknowledgement) messages sent when segments are received
correctly
A retransmission timer
The time will expire if an ACK is not received during the specified time
Retransmissions of segments occur whenever the timer expires.
NOTE
:  
We are skipping the “messy” details of Reliable data transmission!
 
TCP (Transmission Control Protocol) (cont’d)
 
Important
:
 When an Application sends a message down the protocol stack, it selects
whether TCP or UDP should be used for the transmission:
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The Transport Layer in computer networks facilitates logical communication between application processes on different hosts. Two key transport protocols, UDP and TCP, provide distinct services - UDP offers unreliable and unordered delivery, while TCP ensures reliable and ordered delivery with features like connection set-up and congestion control. UDP, known for its simplicity and loss tolerance, is commonly used in streaming multimedia applications, DNS, and SNMP. On the other hand, TCP establishes point-to-point connections, supporting full-duplex data flow with reliable byte stream transmission without message boundaries between bytes.

  • TCP
  • UDP
  • Computer Network
  • Transport Layer
  • Internet

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  1. CECS 474 Computer Network Interoperability TCP & UDP Supplement Layer 4 Transport Protocols Tracy Bradley Maples, Ph.D. Computer Engineering & Computer Science California State University, Long Beach Notes for Douglas E. Comer, Computer Networks and Internets (5th Edition)

  2. The Transport Layer GOAL: The Transport Layer provideslogical communication between application processes running on different hosts. Transport protocols run in the end systems (end-to-end) The sending side breaks application messages into segments and passes them down to the Network layer The receiving side reassembles the segments into messages and passes them up to the Application layer NOTE: The Network Layer provides logical communication between hosts. The Transport Layer provides logical communication between processes.

  3. Transport Layer Protocols Two Transport Protocols are available for Applications to use on the Internet: 1. UDP 2. TCP UDP (User Datagram Protocol) Provides: Unreliable, unordered delivery of segments. TCP (Transmission Control Protocol) Provides: Reliable, in-order delivery of segments. TCP includes: Connection set-up (3-way handshake) Flow Control Congestion Control NOTE:Neither protocol provides: Delay guarantees Bandwidth guarantees

  4. UDP (User Datagram Protocol) UDP is: A no frills, bare bones Internet Transport protocol Provides best effort service UDP segments may be: lost delivered out of order to application Connectionless UDP: has no handshaking between UDP sender, receiver each UDP segment handled independently of others

  5. UDP (User Datagram Protocol) (contd) Since UDP provides so few services, why is there a UDP? 1. UDP has no connection establishment => So it has lower delay It is simple (no connection state is need at sender, receiver) It has a small segment header UDP has no congestion control => UDP can blast away as fast as desired 2. Uses of UDP: It is often used for streaming multimedia apps, because UDP is: loss tolerant rate sensitive UDP is also used in: DNS SNMP

  6. TCP (Transmission Control Protocol) TCP characteristics: point-to-point connections one sender, one receiver full duplex data: bi-directional data flow in same connection reliable, in-order byte steam transmission with no message boundaries between bytes pipelined transmission multiple segments are sent at the same time Maximum segments sent simultaneously = TCP congestion/flow control window size send & receive buffers at sender and receiver connection-oriented: handshaking occurs between the sender, receiver before data exchange Uses flow control: The sender will not overwhelm receiver s buffer

  7. TCP (Transmission Control Protocol) (contd) Conceptual View application writes data application reads data socket door socket door TCP TCP send buffer receive buffer segment Figure from Kurose & Ross, Networking: A Top Down Approach

  8. TCP (Transmission Control Protocol) (contd) TCP creates reliable data service on top of IP s (Layer 3 s) unreliable delivery service. To make transmission reliable, TCP uses: pipelined transmission of segments send & receive buffers at sender and receiver ACKs (Acknowledgement) messages sent when segments are received correctly A retransmission timer The time will expire if an ACK is not received during the specified time Retransmissions of segments occur whenever the timer expires. NOTE: We are skipping the messy details of Reliable data transmission!

  9. TCP (Transmission Control Protocol) (contd) Important: When an Application sends a message down the protocol stack, it selects whether TCP or UDP should be used for the transmission: HTTP, FTP, TELNET, etc. Layer 5 - Application TCP UDP Layer 4 - Transport IP Layer 3 - Network Layer 2 - Link Ethernet, WiFi, PPP, etc. Guided or Unguided media Layer 1 - Physical

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