Internet Protocol: Difference between revisions
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[[IP]] is the acronym for [[Internet Protocol]], which is the method through which data is sent from one computer to another by means of an Internet connection. The IP uniquely identifies a node on the Internet. <ref>[http://searchunifiedcommunications.techtarget.com/definition/Internet-Protocol IP definition]</ref> | |||
==How Does the IP Operate?== | ==How Does the IP Operate?== |
Revision as of 00:24, 10 March 2011
IP is the acronym for Internet Protocol, which is the method through which data is sent from one computer to another by means of an Internet connection. The IP uniquely identifies a node on the Internet. [1]
How Does the IP Operate?
Each computer or device, known as the "host", has at least one IP address which differentiates it from other computers. When data is sent over the Internet the information is divided into small bits known as "packages", which contain the Internet address of the sender (packet's origin) and the receiver host address (destination device). There are the two main numeric addresses and components of each data package.
The Internet Protocol's main duty is to deliver these "packages" to the right destination, but it is not responsible for the order in which the packages arrive. Putting the packages into the right order so that the message/data/information is accurately sent is the responsibility of the Transmission Control Protocol.[2]
The IP considers each package of data as a unique and independent unit of information but the IP must always be in contact with the TCP in order to send the message. The latest IP version is IPv6 which succeeded IPv4. There are some important differences between IPv6 and IPV4 which make the last version more functional and effective.
IP Versions
Currently, there are two IP versions in use: IPv4 and IPv6 and each of these versions describes the IP in a different manner. [3]
According to IPv4, the address contained 32 bits which functioned on private networks and multicast networks. The IPv4 addresses consist of four decimal numbers ranging between 0-255, but the IPv4 address can also be represented in binary, octal or hexadecimal forms. The IPv4 addresses were exhausted due to the low supply of allocated addresses from IANA (Internet Assigned Numbers Authority) and the RIRs (Regional Internet Registries). [4]
IPv6 was created as a solution to the inevitable threat posed by the exhaustion of IPv4 addresses. The Internet Engineering Task Force was involved in its creation as it decided to explore new technologies by expanding the address capability of the Internet. [5]IPv6 does not guarantee a sufficient quantity of addresses but it definitely enables an efficient aggregation and allocation of rooting prefixes for routing nodes.