TCP headers are like postcards that help messages travel from one place to another, making sure they get there safely and in order.
Imagine you’re sending a long letter to your friend using many small postcards. Each postcard has important info written on the front so your friend knows where it came from, where it’s going, and how it fits with the other cards. That’s what a TCP header does, it gives messages extra clues to help them find their way.
How It Works
Each postcard (or TCP header) has special details:
- Who is sending the message
- Who is receiving it
- What part of the message it is
- Whether it needs to be delivered right away or can wait
These clues are like a map, they help messages go through the busy streets of the internet and arrive exactly where they need to be.
Why It Matters
Without these postcards, messages might get mixed up, lost, or delayed. But with them, your friend gets every part of your letter, just like you meant it!
Examples
- Imagine sending a letter with instructions on how to deliver it, that's like a TCP header.
- A TCP header is like a postman’s note telling the receiver how to handle the message inside the envelope.
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See also
- What are broadcast domains?
- How does the internet actually send data across the world?
- What are routers?
- What is OSPF (Open Shortest Path First)?
- What is Internet?