Sometimes called an access method, a protocol is a standard used to define a method of exchanging data over a computer network, such as local area network, Internet, Intranet, etc. Each protocol has its own method of how to handle data in the following situations.
- How data is formatted when sent.
- What to do with data once received.
- How data is compressed.
- How to check for errors in the data.
Likely the most important protocol is TCP/IP (transmission control protocol/Internet protocol) which is used to govern the communications of every computer connected to the Internet. HTTP (Hypertext Transfer Protocol), used to transmit data over the world wide web (Internet), is “carried” by TCP/IP. Below is a list of the various protocols currently listed in the Computer Hope dictionary.
A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z
Communications protocol, Connectionless, Network terms
ADSI Aloha AppleTalk ARP ASP
BGMP BGP BOOTP
CHAP CIFS CTCP
DDP DHCP
EAP EDIINT EIGRP Ethernet EtherTalk
FDHP Frame relay FSP FTP
None
H.323 HDLC HTTP
ICA ICMP IGES IGMP IGP IGRP IMAP IP IPsec IPv4 IPv6 IPX/SPX
Kerberos Kermit
L2TP LAPM LDAP LFAP
Mailto MNP MPLS
NBT NCP NetBEUI NNTP NSP NTP
OSPF
PEP PIM POP PPPoE PPP PPTP
RAP RARP RDP RIP RLP RTP RTSP RTTP
SFTP SLIP SNAP SMTP SNMP SOAP SOCKS SSH STP
TFTP TCP/IP TKIP
UDP
VOIP VRRP
WAP
X.25
ZIP
Related information
- Network and network card help and support.