Retransmission

(Data Networks)

Tech

skills
Data Networks
Link to Dbpedia

What is Retransmission (data networks)?

Retransmission, essentially identical with Automatic repeat request (ARQ), is the resending of packets which have been either damaged or lost. Retransmission is one of the basic mechanisms used by protocols operating over a packet switched computer network to provide reliable communication (such as that provided by a reliable byte stream, for example TCP). Such networks are usually "unreliable", meaning they offer no guarantees that they will not delay, damage, or lose packets, or deliver them out of order. Protocols which provide reliable communication over such networks use a combination of acknowledgments (i.e. an explicit receipt from the destination of the data), retransmission of missing or damaged packets (usually initiated by a time-out), and checksums to provide that reliability.

Technology Types

data networksdirectionnetwork protocolprotocolrule

Translations

opakování přenosupositive acknowledgement with retransmissionretransmisiaretransmisiónretransmisjaritrasmissioneретрансляцияретрансмисијаשידור חוזרإعادة الإرسال再送重发

Synonyms

positive acknowledgment with re-transmissionre-sendre-transmissionresendselective ackselective acknowledgement再伝送重傳

Co-Occuring

aeschecksumclient-servercommunicationdatagrams-socketerror-checkingftpgethostbynamego-back-njavaorder-packetpacketspackets-receivedprotocolretransmissionrsarstegseqnumstart-stopsteganographytcptcp-ft-clienttransferudpudp-ft-clientxbee

Tech Info

Important Persons & Organizations


    Sources: DBpedia, Github, Wikidata
     — Date merged: 04.02.2022, 17:50
     — Date scraped: 20.05.2021, 17:39