Category
page 1Transport layer protocols
Transmission Control Protocol
principal protocol used to stream data across an IP network
User Datagram Protocol
principal protocol used for transmission of datagrams across an IP network
Stream Control Transmission Protocol
computer network protocol
network congestion
reduced quality of service due to high traffic on a computer network
Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol
computer network protocol
Datagram Congestion Control Protocol
message-oriented transport layer protocol
Resource Reservation Protocol
computer network protocol
QUIC AES_128GCM
QUIC () is a general-purpose transport layer network protocol initially designed by Jim Roskind at Google. It was first implemented and deployed in 2012 and was publicly announced in 2013 as experimentation broadened. It was also described at an IETF meeting. QUIC is supported by major web browsers, including Chrome, Edge, Firefox, and Safari. In Chrome, QUIC is used by more than half of all connections to Google's servers.
Explicit Congestion Notification
Extension to the Internet Protocol to signal network congestion
SPX
protocol used by Novell computer networks
Signalling Connection Control Part
from ITU-T recommendation Q.713, is the network protocol for Signalling System 7 networks
Reliable User Datagram Protocol
Internet protocol
Wireless Transport Layer Security
WAP security protocol
UDP Lite
UDP-Lite (Lightweight User Datagram Protocol) is a connectionless protocol that allows a potentially damaged data payload to be delivered to an application rather than being discarded by the receiving station. This is useful as it allows decisions about the integrity of the data to be made in the application layer (application or the codec), where the significance of the bits is understood. UDP-Lite is described in .