IP header

An IP header is header information at the beginning of an IP packet which contains information about IP version, source IP address, destination IP address, time-to-live, etc.

Two different versions of IP are used in practice today: IPv4 and IPv6. The IPv6 header uses IPv6 addresses and thus offers a much bigger address space but is not backwards compatible with IPv4.

IPv4

IPv4 is the fourth version in the development of the Internet Protocol (IP), and routes most traffic on the Internet.[1] The IPv4 header includes thirteen mandatory fields and is as small as 20 bytes. A fourteenth optional and infrequently used options field can increase the header size.

IPv6

IPv6, the successor to IPv4, has been defined and is in various stages of production deployment, and has a different header layout.

An IPv6 packet is the smallest message entity exchanged via the Internet Protocol across an IPv6 network. Packets consist of control information for addressing and routing, and a payload consisting of user data. The control information in IPv6 packets is subdivided into a mandatory fixed header and optional extension headers. The payload of an IPv6 packet is typically a datagram or segment of the higher-level transport layer protocol, but may be data for an internet layer (e.g., ICMPv6) or link layer (e.g., OSPF) instead.

gollark: In the giant cube. Also, I haven't put it in the shop yet.
gollark: Actually, gold for 1KST.
gollark: But if I sell at those prices, I can probably get *loads* of turtles whilst selling relatively fast.
gollark: 3KST from iron, maybe 3KST from gold too - one turtle worth, excluding iron.
gollark: I have about a stack of ore ready to go. That's 3KST. Not really worth it.

References

  1. "BGP Analysis Reports". Retrieved 2013-01-09.
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