Ask Question

When a file is transferred between two computers, two acknowledgment strategies are possible. in the first one, the file is chopped up into packets, which are individually acknowledged by the receiver, but the file transfer as a whole is not acknowledged. in the second one, the packets are not acknowledged individually, but the entire file is acknowledged when it arrives. discuss these two approaches?

+2
Answers (1)
  1. 23 April, 09:06
    0
    The TCP/IP stack is responsible for the "chopping up" into packets of the data for transmission and for their acknowledgment. Depending on the transport protocol that is used (TCP or UDP) each packet will be acknowledged or not, respectively.

    the strategy when the file is chopped up into packets, which are individually acknowledged by the receiver, but the file transfer as a whole is not acknowledged is OK in situations (Applications) that do not need the whole file to be sent, Web site for example: different parts of the web site can arrive in different times.

    The other strategy, in which the packets are not acknowledged individually, but the entire file is acknowledged when it arrives is suitable for FTP (mail transfer), we need whole mail, not parts of it.
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question 👍 “When a file is transferred between two computers, two acknowledgment strategies are possible. in the first one, the file is chopped up into ...” in 📗 Computers & Technology if the answers seem to be not correct or there’s no answer. Try a smart search to find answers to similar questions.
Search for Other Answers