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📄 rfc534.txt

📁 著名的RFC文档,其中有一些文档是已经翻译成中文的的.
💻 TXT
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Network Working Group                                       David WaldenRequest for Comments: 534                                        BBN-NETNIC: 17453                                                  17 July 1973References:  512, 516, 533                         Lost Message Detection   As an aside to RFC 533, note that if sending Hosts do uniquely   identify messages on a given link using the extra four bits and   receiving Hosts do look at these bits, a lost message detection   system such as those suggested in RFCs 512 and 516 drops right out of   using of the unique message-id.  These extra four bits can be treated   as Hathaway's SCB of RFC 512 providing a 16 element sequence number   on a per connection basis.  A 16 element sequence is sufficient as   the IMPs never allow more than four outstanding messages at one time   between a given pair of Hosts.  As Hathaway also suggests, the 0   element in the sequence can be used to indicate to the receiving Host   that sequence numbers are not being used.   To summarize, there appear to be three modes of using the message-id   number under Host/Host protocol:   1. The sender can always set the extra four bits to 0 and only      transmit one message over a given link at a time -- this is slow      but it allows orderly retransmission of messages without any help      from the receiver.   2. The receiver can give no help to the sender.  In this case it      doesn't matter whether the sender uses the extra four bits to      uniquely identify the messages or not -- the sender has no method      of orderly retransmission, although the sender can accurately      identify which message was lost if the sender has uniquely      identified the messages.   3. The sender can have multiple messages outstanding (i.e., RFNMs not      received) on a given link and the receiver can help the sender.      In this case, if the sender uses the extra four bits to uniquely      identify the messages in a way which can be synchronized with the      receiver (e.g., sequential id numbers), the receiver can reliably      detect lost messages.   Although it probably will seem insufficient to some, if the sender   and receiver use synchronized unique message-id numbers, very   reliable retransmission schemes are readily available.  For instance,   the sender can retransmit the appropriate messages in response to   incomplete transmissions and the receiver can use the unique   message-ids to sort the retransmitted messages into the proper orderWalden                                                          [Page 1]RFC 534                  Lost Message Detection             17 July 1973   with the other received messages.  Alternatively, the receiver can   discard all messages received out of order and the sender can back up   and retransmit a message for which an incomplete transmission was   received and all subsequent messages.         [ This RFC was put into machine readable form for entry ]       [ into the online RFC archives by Alex McKenzie with 10/99 ]Walden                                                          [Page 2]

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