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Configure and troubleshoot the TCP/IP protocol.

TCP/IP
Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol. A networking protocol that allows computers to communicate across interconnected networks and the Internet. Every computer on the Internet supports TCP/IP.

Transmission Control Protocol, A connection based Internet protocol responsible for breaking data into packets, which the IP protocol sends over the network. IP is located at the TCP/IP Internet layer which corresponds to the network layer of the OSI Model. IP is responsible for routing packets by their IP address.

IP is a connectionless protocol. which means, IP does not establish a connection between source and destination before transmitting data, thus packet delivery is not guaranteed by IP. Instead, this must be provided by TCP. TCP is a connection based protocol and, is designed to guarantee delivery by monitoring the connection between source and destination before data is transmitted. TCP places packets in sequential order and requires acknowledgment from the receiving node that they arrived properly before any new data is sent.

Microsoft TCP/IP provides the following benefits:  

  • Support for Internet connectivity and the Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP).
  • Connectivity across interconnected networks with different operating systems and hardware platforms, including communication with many non-Microsoft systems, such as Internet hosts, Apple Macintosh systems, IBM mainframes, UNIX systems, and Open VMS systems.
  • Support for automatic TCP/IP configuration using Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) servers such as Windows 2000 servers.
  • Support for automatic IP-address-to-NetBIOS computer name resolution using Windows NT Windows Internet Naming Service (WINS) servers.
  • Support for Windows Sockets 1.1 and 2.0, which are used by many client/server applications and many public-domain Internet tools.
  • Support for the NetBIOS interface, commonly known as NetBIOS over TCP/IP.
  • Support for many commonly used utilities, which are installed with the protocol.