Results 241 to 247 of about 53,372 (247)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
2004
Publisher Summary This chapter discusses the IPv6 specifications for multicast, including the multicast address format, multicast scopes, transient/ permanent multicast groups, and multicast address allocation. It also covers the multicast listener discovery (MLD) protocol and multicast routing under IPv6.
openaire +2 more sources
Publisher Summary This chapter discusses the IPv6 specifications for multicast, including the multicast address format, multicast scopes, transient/ permanent multicast groups, and multicast address allocation. It also covers the multicast listener discovery (MLD) protocol and multicast routing under IPv6.
openaire +2 more sources
1998
Le protocole courant d'Internet IPv4 peut utiliser le protocole de sécurité IPsec destiné également pour IPv6. Les algorithmes d'authentification pour IPsec/IPv6 doivent satisfaire deux critères: la fiabilité et la performance. Dans ce rapport on a étudié les idées générales d'authentification dans les protocoles IP et on a comparé les performances des
openaire +1 more source
Le protocole courant d'Internet IPv4 peut utiliser le protocole de sécurité IPsec destiné également pour IPv6. Les algorithmes d'authentification pour IPsec/IPv6 doivent satisfaire deux critères: la fiabilité et la performance. Dans ce rapport on a étudié les idées générales d'authentification dans les protocoles IP et on a comparé les performances des
openaire +1 more source
2004
Publisher Summary This chapter begins with a discussion of the IPv6 addressing architecture, as designed by the original IPng working groups. The most obvious difference between IPv4 and IPv6 is in their addressing formats. IPv4 uses 32-bit (4-byte) addresses to uniquely identify nodes within the global Internet.
openaire +2 more sources
Publisher Summary This chapter begins with a discussion of the IPv6 addressing architecture, as designed by the original IPng working groups. The most obvious difference between IPv4 and IPv6 is in their addressing formats. IPv4 uses 32-bit (4-byte) addresses to uniquely identify nodes within the global Internet.
openaire +2 more sources