Why does UDP have a length field in the header and TCP does not?
I am guessing that the length of the segment in TCP is inferred from the IP header but one should be able to do the same for a UDP datagram
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There is a 96 bit pseudo header conceptually prefixed to the TCP header that contains the information already. The checksum field description from this source gives the answer:
The information is not needed at the TCP level since TCP is a stream based protocol. |
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According to TCP/IP Illustrated Volume 1, the length field is redundant. That's all Stevens says on the matter. I personally believe it was to make the UDP header length (in bits) divisible by 32 :) |
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TCP is a stream based protocol, so in the end when the data comes out (e.g. you read from a socket), you simply read from a stream. UDP is datagram based, here you put chunks of data in a pipe, and a read from the socket on the other side brings the same chunks out. So rather intuitively you can say that on a udp level you need to know the length of the chunks that were pushed in there while on a tcp level you don't need to. |
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