TCP Ip
TCP Ip
TCP Ip
TCP/IP Tutorial
TCP/IP is the communication protocol for the Internet.
In this TCP/IP tutorial you will learn what TCP/IP is, and how it
works.
Introduction to TCP/IP
TCP/IP is the communication protocol for the Internet.
What is TCP/IP?
TCP/IP is the communication protocol for communication between computers connected to the
Internet.
TCP/IP stands for Transmission Control Protocol / Internet Protocol.
The standard defines how electronic devices (like computers) should be connected to the Internet,
and how data should be transmitted between them.
Inside TCP/IP
Hiding inside the TCP/IP standard there is a number of protocols for handling data communication:
You will learn more about these standards later in this tutorial.
IP is Connection-Less
IP is for communication between computers.
IP is a "connection-less" communication protocol. It does not occupy the communication line
between two communicating computers. This way IP reduces the need for network lines. Each line
can be used for communication between many different computers at the same time.
With IP, messages (or other data) are broken up into small independent "packets" and sent between
computers via the Internet.
IP is responsible for "routing" each packet to its destination.
IP Routers
When an IP packet is sent from a computer, it arrives at an IP router.
The IP router is responsible for "routing" the packet to its destination, directly or via another router.
The path the packet will follow might be different from other packets of the same communication.
The router is responsible for the right addressing depending on traffic volume, errors in the
network, or other parameters.
Connection-Less Analogy
Communicating via IP is like sending a long letter as a large number of small postcards, each finding
its own (often different) way to the receiver.
TCP/IP
TCP/IP is TCP and IP working together.
TCP takes care of the communication between your application software (i.e. your browser) and
your network software.
IP takes care of the communication with other computers.
TCP is responsible for breaking data down into IP packets before they are sent, and for assembling
the packets when they arrive.
IP is responsible for sending the packets to the receiver.
TCP/IP Addressing
TCP/IP uses 32 bits, or 4 numbers between 0 and 255 to address a computer.
IP Addresses
Each computer must have an IP address before it can connect to the Internet.
Each IP packet must have an address before it can be sent to another computer.
This is an IP address: 192.68.20.50.
This might be the same IP address: www.w3schools.com
You will learn more about IP addresses and IP names in the next chapter of this tutorial.
32 Bits = 4 Bytes
TCP/IP uses 32 bits addressing. One computer byte is 8 bits. So TCP/IP uses 4 computer bytes.
A computer byte can contain 256 different values:
00000000, 00000001, 00000010, 00000011, 00000100, 00000101, 00000110, 00000111,
00001000 .......and all the way up to 11111111.
Now you know why a TCP/IP address is 4 numbers between 0 and 255
Domain Names
12 digit numbers are hard to remember. Using a name is easier.
Names used for TCP/IP addresses are called domain names. w3schools.com is a domain name.
When you address a web site like http://www.w3schools.com, the name is translated to a number
by a DNS process (Domain Name Server).
All over the world, a large number of DNS servers are connected to the Internet. DNS servers are
responsible for translating domain names into TCP/IP addresses and update each other with new
domain names.
When a new domain name is registered together with a TCP/IP address, DNS servers all over the
world are updated with this information.
TCP/IP Protocols
TCP/IP is a large collection of different communication protocols.
A Family of Protocols
TCP/IP is a large collection of different communication protocols based upon the two original
protocols TCP and IP.
IP - Internet Protocol
The IP protocol takes care of the communication with other computers.
IP is responsible for the sending and receiving data packets over the Internet.
TCP/IP Email
Email is one of the most important users of TCP/IP.