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Slide-2-TCP-IP Model

The TCP/IP model was originally developed by DARPA in the late 1960s to connect defense department networks. It uses TCP/IP to connect networks worldwide on the Internet. The TCP/IP model has four layers: application, transport, internet, and network access. While similar to the OSI model, the TCP/IP model combines some layers and has differences in scope between layers. The layers work together to reliably transmit data packets from a source to destination across interconnected networks.

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Robbie Soliman
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
57 views11 pages

Slide-2-TCP-IP Model

The TCP/IP model was originally developed by DARPA in the late 1960s to connect defense department networks. It uses TCP/IP to connect networks worldwide on the Internet. The TCP/IP model has four layers: application, transport, internet, and network access. While similar to the OSI model, the TCP/IP model combines some layers and has differences in scope between layers. The layers work together to reliably transmit data packets from a source to destination across interconnected networks.

Uploaded by

Robbie Soliman
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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TCP/IP MODEL

•WMSU
TCP/IP model development
• The late-60s The Defense Advance
Research Projects Agency (DARPA)
originally developed Transmission Control
Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) to
interconnect various defense department
computer networks.
• The Internet, an International Wide Area
Network, uses TCP/IP to connect networks
across the world.
4 layers of the TCP/IP model
• Layer 4: Application
• Layer 3: Transport
• Layer 2: Internet
• Layer 1: Network access

It is important to note that some of the


layers in the TCP/IP model have the same
name as layers in the OSI model.
Do not confuse the layers of the two models.
The network access layer
• Concerned with all of the issues that an IP
packet requires to actually make the physical
link. All the details in the OSI physical and
data link layers.
– Electrical, mechanical, procedural and functional
specifications.
– Data rate, Distances, Physical connector.
– Frames, physical addressing.
– Synchronization, flow control, error control.
The internet layer
• Send source packets from any network on
the internetwork and have them arrive at the
destination independent of the path and
networks they took to get there.
– Packets, Logical addressing.
– Internet Protocol (IP).
– Route , routing table, routing protocol.
The transport layer
• The transport layer deals with the quality-
of-service issues of reliability, flow control,
and error correction.
– Segments, data stream, datagram.
– Connection oriented and connectionless.
– Transmission control protocol (TCP).
– User datagram protocol (UDP).
– End-to-end flow control.
– Error detection and recovery.
The application layer
• Handles high-level protocols, issues of
representation, encoding, and dialog
control.
• The TCP/IP combines all application-
related issues into one layer, and assures
this data is properly packaged for the next
layer.
– FTP, HTTP, SMNP, DNS ...
– Format of data, data structure, encode …
– Dialog control, session management …
TCP/IP protocol stack
Comparing TCP/IP with OSI
Comparing TCP/IP with OSI (cont.)
Similarities:
– Both have layers.
– Both have application layers, though they
include very different services.
– Both have comparable transport and network
layers
– Packet-switched technology is assumed.
– Networking professionals need to know both.
Comparing TCP/IP with OSI (cont.)
Differences:
– TCP/IP combines the presentation and session
layer issues into its application layer.
– TCP/IP combines the OSI data link and
physical layers into one layer.
– TCP/IP appears simpler because it has fewer
layers.
– Typically networks aren't built on the OSI
protocol, even though the OSI model is used
as a guide.

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