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CS 313 Introduction to Computer Networking & Telecommunication Chapter 6 Transport Layer Chi-Cheng Lin, Winona State University Topics Transport Service Elements of Transport Protocols 2 Transport Service Services provided to the upper layers Goal Provide efficient, reliable, and costeffective services to its users (application/session layer processes) Transport entity Hardware/software within transport layer to do the work 3 Logical Relationship The network, transport, and application layers 4 Transport Services Connection-oriented E.g., TCP (Transmission Control Protocol) in TCP/IP Connectionless E.g., UDP (User Datagram Protocol) in TCP/IP Why another layer between network and application/session layers? 5 Transport Service Primitives The primitives for a simple transport service Transport Service Primitives TPDU Transport protocol data unit Message transmitted between transport entities Nesting of TPDUs, packets, and frames. 7 Transport Service Primitives Client-server example Client process CONNECT SEND RECEIVE : DISCONNECT Server process LISTEN ACCEPT RECEIVE SEND : DISCONNECT 8 Elements of Transport Protocols Addressing Connect Disconnect Flow control and buffering ----------------------------- Multiplexing Crash recovery 9 Elements of Transport Protocols Transport protocol Used to implement transport service Resembles data link protocol Error control, sequencing, flow control, etc. BUT, their environments are different! Environment of data link layer Environment of transport layer 10 Elements of Transport Protocols Differences from data link protocol Explicit addressing of destination More complicated initial connection establishment Storage capacity in subnet Packet might be "hiding" in subnet Large and dynamically varying number of connections buffering and flow control needed in both layers, but different approaches required 11 Addressing Which remote application process to connect to Transport address Which process can listen for connection TSAP Transport service access point Internet: Port Usually multiple TSAP supported by transport entity NSAP Network service access point Internet: IP address One or more NSAP (e.g., host w/ more than one connections, router, etc.) 12 Addressing Establishing a Connection Problem: delayed duplicates Congestion, timeout, retransmission, packet hidden in subnet Solution Ensure no packet lives longer than some known time Lifetime control Restricted subnet design Putting a hop counter in each packet Timestamping each packet 14 Connection Establishment Three protocol scenarios for establishing a connection using a three-way handshake. CR denotes CONNECTION REQUEST. Normal operation. Connection Establishment Three protocol scenarios for establishing a connection using a three-way handshake. CR denotes CONNECTION REQUEST. Old duplicate CONNECTION REQUEST appearing out of nowhere. Connection Establishment Three protocol scenarios for establishing a connection using a three-way handshake. CR denotes CONNECTION REQUEST. Duplicate CONNECTION REQUEST and duplicate ACK Connection Release Abrupt disconnection with loss of data Analogy - Two-Army Problem Unreliable channel Three-way, four-way, … , N-way handshake NONE OF THEM WORKS 19 Releasing a Connection Three-way handshake + timers Fails when all DRs from source lost Half-open connection Solution: If no TPDUs have arrived for a certain amount of time disconnect Timer needed Dummy TPDU might be needed to keep a connection alive 20 Connection Release Four protocol scenarios for releasing a connection. (a) Normal case of three-way handshake Connection Release Four protocol scenarios for releasing a connection. (b) Final ACK lost. Connection Release Four protocol scenarios for releasing a connection. (c) Response lost Connection Release Four protocol scenarios for releasing a connection. (d) Response lost and subsequent DRs lost. Flow Control Flow control Similar to data link layer Sliding windows (or some other scheme) needed Difference Host: numerous connections Router: a few lines different buffering strategies 25