¼±Åà - È­»ìǥŰ/¿£ÅÍŰ ´Ý±â - ESC

 
"UD"¿¡ ´ëÇÑ ¼¼ºÎ °Ë»ö °á°úÀÔ´Ï´Ù
KMLE À¥ ¿ë¾î ¸ÂÃã °Ë»ö °á°ú : 5 ÆäÀÌÁö: 6
UDP UDP is defined in RFC 768. UDP offers a limited amount of service ontopof IP and 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. UDP provides two services not provided by the IP layer. It provides port numbers to help distinguish different user requests and, optionally, a checksum capability to verify that the data arrived intact.
Ãâó: tiefighter.et.tudelft.nl/~arthur/aaa/aaaterms.html
UDP User Datagram Protocol.
Ãâó: ece-www.colorado.edu/~mathys/ecen1200/terms.html
UDP A connectionless protocol that, like TCP, runs on top of IP networks. Unlike TCP/IP, UDP/IP provides very few error recovery services, offering instead a direct way to send and receive datagrams over an IP network. It's used primarily for broadcasting messages over a network.
Ãâó: www.sec-1.com/glossary/u.html
UDP User Datagram Protocol. A method of communicating between computers which does not guarantee that every bit arrives at its end destination. Favored for time-sensitive data such as streaming media.
Ãâó: www.channelstorm.com/Manual/Data/GL00/GL00.htm
UDP UDP is a high-level communication protocol that coordinates the one-way transmission of data in a packet data network. The UDP protocol coordinates the division of files or blocks of data information into packets and adds sequence information to the packets that are transmitted during a communication session using Internet Protocol (IP) addressing. This allows the receiving end to receive and re-sequence the packets to recreate the original data file or block of data that was transmitted. ...
Ãâó: www.whichvoip.com/voip/voip_dictionary.htm
ÀÌ ¾Æ·¡ ºÎÅÍ´Â °á°ú°¡ ¾ø½À´Ï´Ù.
KMLE À¥ ¿ë¾î À¯»ç °Ë»ö °á°ú : 0 ÆäÀÌÁö: 6
ÅëÇÕ°Ë»ö ¿Ï·á