What is Internet Protocol For?
Legacy signals
Legacy popularity: 486 legacy views
Legacy rating: 2.5/5 from 2 archived votes
Reader rating
Not enough ratings yet
Aggregate average appears after enough eligible reader ratings.
Rate this resource
Sign in to rate this resource.
Internet Protocol
The Internet Protocol (IP) is the basis upon which all other Internet protocols operate. IP provides the basic mechanism for the forwarding of data between two computers on separate networks. IP can also fragment packets it they are too large for some older networks to forward, but this feature is largely obsolete because all routers built in the past decade are able t pass large IP packets.
IP pickets are simply handed from computer to computer until they reach their destination. The computer sending the packet and the computer receiving
the packet are called end systems because they are at the ends of the communication on session. The computers between the end systems are called intermediate systems. Intermediate system is a generic and more theoretical term for computers more commonly called routers, gateways, or multihomed hosts.
Router usually refers to specially designed computers optimized for routing packets.
Gateway refers to general-purpose computers that are simply used as routers and perform no other function.
Multihomed host refers to general-purpose computers that perform some other function in addition to routing packets such as file service or Internet site hosting.
The term host is commonly used in the UNIX and Internet communities to
mean any computer (client, server, or peer) that is directly attached to the Internet.
Services of IP
IP provides the functions of addressing and fragmentation only to support
packet forwarding; it does not presume or implement any other functionality.
- IP cannot guarantee that a packet will reach its destination.
- IP has no ability to perform flow control.
- IP performs no error correction.
- IP performs no error detection for the data payload.
- IP does not guarantee that packets will arrive in order and does not order them sequentially.
IP relies on the data link to transmit data in an error-free condition and
does not attempt to provide any guarantees of service. Other protocols, which are transported withi
IP packets, add information such as packet serial numbers and error-correction codes. The destination system can check to see if all the packets have arrived, arrange them in the correct order, and request that
any missing packets be sent again based on this additional information. TCP performs all these functions, as explained in the next section.
IP treats each packet as an independent entity, unrelated to any other packet being transmitted. IP does not have logical or virtual connections, circuits, sockets, or any other mechanism to provide associations between packets. These functions are all provided by higher (or occasionally lower) level protocols.
IP does not perform error correction. IP does, however, implement limited error checking to verify that the header information is correct; damaged header information could result in the packet being forwarded to the wrong address. If, at any time, a router on the path between the sending computer and the receiving computer detects that an IP packet's address header has become damaged (by comparing the header with the header's checksum), the router will simply discard the packet without notification of any kind. Again, higher- level protocols will determine what data is missing and generate a request for retransmission. This header checksum does not detect errors that may have crept into the data portion of the packet; that function also is the responsibility of higher-level protocols.
IP does include information about how long a packet should remai
"alive" in a system. Every IP packet contains a time-to-live indicator and decreases this counter by one each time a router forwards the packet or whenever one second of real time elapses. The time-to-live counter usually starts at 64, 128, or 255. When a packet's time-to-live counter reaches zero, the packet is discarded.
This event can occur in three (rare) cases:
- When the network is too busy to forward packets in a timely manner
- When a circular route exists and packets are simply being passed around it
- When the route between two computers is simply too long to he useful
In all three cases, the route is not usable so communications should not continue.
Article author
About the Author
Further reading
Further Reading
Article
Grow Your Brand Using Meta Ads Services in Delhi NCR
Businesses in today's digital-first world always look for faster and more efficient means to get to the online audience. Social media are the new-age marketing places where brands can interact with customers according to their interests, habits, and geographic locations. The digital era has thus converted paid social ads into effective means of getting the brand recognized and generating leads. The increasing competition in metropolitan areas makes meta ads services in Delhi
February 6, 2026
Article
Omnichannel Support 2.0: Creating Seamless Journeys Across Devices
The New Reality of Connected Customers A customer begins their day checking messages on a smartphone, continues research on a laptop during lunch, and resolves an issue later through a smart TV app or voice assistant. This fluid movement across devices has become normal. What has changed is customer expectation. People no longer see channels as separate paths; they see one continuous journey. Omnichannel Support 2.0 is the response to this reality, focusing not just on presen
January 9, 2026
Article
What to Look for in Reliable Call Center agencies
Choosing the right call center agency can make or break your customer support strategy. With dozens of providers promising competitive rates and high efficiency, businesses often feel overwhelmed by the choices. Many focus on price alone, but reliability, quality, and alignment with your brand are far more important for long-term success. A reliable agency does more than answer calls—it becomes an extension of your business, shaping customer perception and influencing l
January 6, 2026
Website
Digital Marketing Agency Dubai
Si3 Digital is a leading digital marketing agency in Dubai offering web design, eCommerce, SEO, social media, and paid advertising services. Focused on results and ROI, we help UAE businesses boost visibility, generate leads, and grow online with tailored digital strategies.
October 26, 2025