TCP and UDP are transport layer protocols; the OSI layer is layer 4 (transport)
Rip and BGP is in Application layer Ospf is in Transport Layer
Application layer protocols: DNS and HTTP Transport layer protocols: UDP for DNS and TCP for HTTP
**The TCP transport layer protocol uses windowing and acknowledgments for reliable transfer of data. **The TCP and UDP port numbers are used by application layer protocols. **The TCP transport layer protocol provides services to direct the data packets to their destination hosts.
The transport layer segments data whenever the size of the packet is too large to transport efficiently--in practice, this happens whenever the data is too large to fit in a single network layer packet. Although the network layer can also fragment packets, the process is inefficient and generally the transport layer segment size is adjusted so that no further division is required in the network layer. Much more details are here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TCP_header#Maximum_segment_size
true or false.all transport layer protocols are concerned with reliability
TCP and UDP are transport layer protocols; the OSI layer is layer 4 (transport)
Transport layer TCP/IP Protocols are TCP and UDP
No - Transport layer protocols are not concerned with addressing packets to the correct system. (True)
Rip and BGP is in Application layer Ospf is in Transport Layer
Provides values that enable different transport layer protocols to perform different functions
Application layer protocols: DNS and HTTP Transport layer protocols: UDP for DNS and TCP for HTTP
Port Number
There is a good descrition of the network layer and TCP in the related link. NO. In general TCP and UDP are transport protocols that operates in Layer 4 Transport Layer
TELNET
Tcp/ip
The network layer protocol is Trivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP)