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  • User Datagram Protocol

    rfc768 https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc768

           Internet Standard
    RFC 768                                                        J. Postel
                                                                         ISI
                                                              28 August 1980
    
    
    
                             User Datagram Protocol
                             ----------------------
    
    Introduction
    ------------
    
    This User Datagram  Protocol  (UDP)  is  defined  to  make  available  a
    datagram   mode  of  packet-switched   computer   communication  in  the
    environment  of  an  interconnected  set  of  computer  networks.   This
    protocol  assumes  that the Internet  Protocol  (IP)  [1] is used as the
    underlying protocol.
    
    This protocol  provides  a procedure  for application  programs  to send
    messages  to other programs  with a minimum  of protocol mechanism.  The
    protocol  is transaction oriented, and delivery and duplicate protection
    are not guaranteed.  Applications requiring ordered reliable delivery of
    streams of data should use the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) [2].
    
    Format
    ------
    
    
                      0      7 8     15 16    23 24    31
                     +--------+--------+--------+--------+
                     |     Source      |   Destination   |
                     |      Port       |      Port       |
                     +--------+--------+--------+--------+
                     |                 |                 |
                     |     Length      |    Checksum     |
                     +--------+--------+--------+--------+
                     |
                     |          data octets ...
                     +---------------- ...
    
                          User Datagram Header Format
    
    Fields
    ------
    
    Source Port is an optional field, when meaningful, it indicates the port
    of the sending  process,  and may be assumed  to be the port  to which a
    reply should  be addressed  in the absence of any other information.  If
    not used, a value of zero is inserted.
    
    
    
    
    
    Postel                                                          [page 1]

    
                                                                 28 Aug 1980
    User Datagram Protocol                                           RFC 768
    Fields
    
    
    
    Destination  Port has a meaning  within  the  context  of  a  particular
    internet destination address.
    
    Length  is the length  in octets  of this user datagram  including  this
    header  and the data.   (This  means  the minimum value of the length is
    eight.)
    
    Checksum is the 16-bit one's complement of the one's complement sum of a
    pseudo header of information from the IP header, the UDP header, and the
    data,  padded  with zero octets  at the end (if  necessary)  to  make  a
    multiple of two octets.
    
    The pseudo  header  conceptually prefixed to the UDP header contains the
    source  address,  the destination  address,  the protocol,  and the  UDP
    length.   This information gives protection against misrouted datagrams.
    This checksum procedure is the same as is used in TCP.
    
                      0      7 8     15 16    23 24    31
                     +--------+--------+--------+--------+
                     |          source address           |
                     +--------+--------+--------+--------+
                     |        destination address        |
                     +--------+--------+--------+--------+
                     |  zero  |protocol|   UDP length    |
                     +--------+--------+--------+--------+
    
    If the computed  checksum  is zero,  it is transmitted  as all ones (the
    equivalent  in one's complement  arithmetic).   An all zero  transmitted
    checksum  value means that the transmitter  generated  no checksum  (for
    debugging or for higher level protocols that don't care).
    
    User Interface
    --------------
    
    A user interface should allow
    
      the creation of new receive ports,
    
      receive  operations  on the receive  ports that return the data octets
      and an indication of source port and source address,
    
      and an operation  that allows  a datagram  to be sent,  specifying the
      data, source and destination ports and addresses to be sent.
    
    
    
    
    
    
    [page 2]                                                          Postel
    
    
    28 Aug 1980
    RFC 768                                           User Datagram Protocol
                                                                IP Interface
    
    
    
    IP Interface
    -------------
    
    The UDP module  must be able to determine  the  source  and  destination
    internet addresses and the protocol field from the internet header.  One
    possible  UDP/IP  interface  would return  the whole  internet  datagram
    including all of the internet header in response to a receive operation.
    Such an interface  would  also allow  the UDP to pass  a  full  internet
    datagram  complete  with header  to the IP to send.  The IP would verify
    certain fields for consistency and compute the internet header checksum.
    
    Protocol Application
    --------------------
    
    The major uses of this protocol is the Internet Name Server [3], and the
    Trivial File Transfer [4].
    
    Protocol Number
    ---------------
    
    This is protocol  17 (21 octal)  when used  in  the  Internet  Protocol.
    Other protocol numbers are listed in [5].
    
    References
    ----------
    
    [1]     Postel,   J.,   "Internet  Protocol,"  RFC 760,  USC/Information
            Sciences Institute, January 1980.
    
    [2]     Postel,    J.,   "Transmission   Control   Protocol,"   RFC 761,
            USC/Information Sciences Institute, January 1980.
    
    [3]     Postel,  J.,  "Internet  Name Server,"  USC/Information Sciences
            Institute, IEN 116, August 1979.
    
    [4]     Sollins,  K.,  "The TFTP Protocol,"  Massachusetts  Institute of
            Technology, IEN 133, January 1980.
    
    [5]     Postel,   J.,   "Assigned   Numbers,"  USC/Information  Sciences
            Institute, RFC 762, January 1980.
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    Postel                                                          [page 3]
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  • 原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/rsapaper/p/15497851.html
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