Can you identify cases where the receiver is ACKing every other received segment (see Table 3.2 in the text) among these first ten data-carrying segments?Group of answer choicesNo. Each of the first 10 ACKs acknowledges exactly 1448 bytes of payload data.Yes! After the first ACK every remaining ACK acknowledges two segments' worth of payload data.Yes! Every ACK acknowledges two segments' worth of payload data.
Question
Can you identify cases where the receiver is ACKing every other received segment (see Table 3.2 in the text) among these first ten data-carrying segments?Group of answer choicesNo. Each of the first 10 ACKs acknowledges exactly 1448 bytes of payload data.Yes! After the first ACK every remaining ACK acknowledges two segments' worth of payload data.Yes! Every ACK acknowledges two segments' worth of payload data.
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Similar Questions
How much data does the receiver typically acknowledge in an ACK among the first ten data-carrying segments sent from the client to gaia.cs.umass.edu? Group of answer choicesEach acknowledgment acknowledges exactly 1448 bytes of payload data.Some ACKs acknowledge zero bytes of data (these are negative ACKs) and some ACKs acknowledge 1448 bytes of data.Some ACKs acknowledge 1448 bytes of data (corresponding to a single segment), and other ACKs acknowledge 2896 bytes of data (corresponding to two segments)
TCP sequence numbers and ACKs (2). Suppose that as shown in the figure below, a TCP sender is sending segments with 100 bytes of payload. The TCP sender sends five segments with sequence numbers 100, 200, 300, 400, and 500. Suppose that the segment with sequence number 300 is lost. The TCP receiver will buffer correctly-received but not-yet-in-order segments for later delivery to the application layer (once missing segments are later received). Complete the sentences below ....After receiving segment 100, the receiver responds with an ACK with value: After receiving segment 200, the receiver responds with an ACK with value: After receiving segment 500, the receiver responds with an ACK with value: After receiving the retransmitted segment 300, the receiver responds with an ACK with value:
A TCP receiver must send an acknowledgement for every segment it receives.Group of answer choicesTrue: for the sender to know that the bytes in each segment have been received the receiver must ACK each segment individually.False: TCP uses cumulative acknowledgements, so the receiver need only send an acknowledgment for the bytes in the segment with the largest sequence number that has been successfully received.
TCP sequence numbers and ACKs (1). Consider the TCP Telnet scenario below (from Fig. 3.31 in text). Why is it that the receiver sends an ACK that is one larger than the sequence number in the received datagram?Group of answer choicesBecause TCP sequence numbers always increase by 1, with every new segment, and the TCP receiver always send the sequence number of the next expected segmentBecause the send-to receiver segment carries only one byte of data, and after that segment is received, the next expected byte of data is just the next byte (i.e., has an index that is one larger) in the data stream.
7.3-1. Overlapping 802.11 wireless networks, with ACKs (d)Overlapping wireless senders with ACKs. Now suppose we are again in the wireless scenario, and that for every data message sent from source to destination, the destination will send an ACK message back to the source (e.g., as in TCP). Also suppose that each ACK message takes up one slot. What is the maximum rate at which data messages can be transferred from C to A, given that there are no other messages between any other source/destination pairs? [Note that successful ACKs do not count towards data message throughput].Group of answer choices1 message/slot.0.25 messages/slot (i.e., one message every four slots).0.5 messages/slot (i.e., 1 message every two slots).2 messages/slot.
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