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RFC 1149, RFC 2549 IPv4: RFC 760, RFC 790, RFC 791 IPv6: RFC 1883, RFC 2460, RFC 8200 IPv6 addressing: RFC 2373, RFC 3513, RFC 4291 Internet Relay Chat: RFC 1459, RFC 2810, RFC 2811, RFC 2812, RFC 2813 Internet Open Trading Protocol: RFC 2801, RFC 3504, RFC 2802, RFC 2935, RFC 3538, RFC 3867 ISCSI: RFC 3720, RFC 3783 Kerberos: RFC 1964
RFC 791 describes the procedure for IP fragmentation, and transmission and reassembly of IP packets. [1] RFC 815 describes a simplified reassembly algorithm. [2] The Identification field along with the foreign and local internet address and the protocol ID, and Fragment offset field along with Don't Fragment and More Fragments flags in the IP header are used for fragmentation and reassembly of ...
In 1993, based on this work, RFC 1517 introduced Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR), [7] which expressed the number of bits (from the most significant) as, for instance, /24, and the class-based scheme was dubbed classful, by contrast. CIDR was designed to permit repartitioning of any address space so that smaller or larger blocks of ...
When an RFC becomes an Internet Standard (STD), it is assigned an STD number but retains its RFC number. When an Internet Standard is updated, its number is unchanged but refers to a different RFC or set of RFCs. For example, in 2007 RFC 3700 was an Internet Standard (STD 1) and in May 2008 it was replaced with RFC 5000.
RFC 1349 and RFC 1060 only show examples of one bit used at a time for application-default values, although RFC 791 mentions that at most two of the three indications it has should be set nominally. One such use is known from mod_iptos. [6]
Internet Protocol (IP) (a specification of the IETF for transmitting packets of data on a network – specifically, IETF RFC 791; MQTT (Message Queuing Telemetry Transport) is a lightweight, publish-subscribe network protocol that transports messages between devices.
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IEN 54 Internetwork Protocol Specification Version 4 (September 1978) is the first description of IPv4 using the header that would become standardized in 1980 as RFC 760. IEN 80; IEN 111; IEN 123; IEN 128/RFC 760 (1980) IP versions 1 to 3 were experimental versions, designed between 1973 and 1978. [7]