The information in this article applies to:
SUMMARY
NetBIOS provides session-layer services like packet assembly-disassembly
and named addressing for Microsoft's NWLink protocol. NetBIOS, like SPX,
also provides guaranteed packet delivery and packet sequencing on the
Transport layer. For NetBIOS to operate within an NWLink environment,
routers must be able to propagate NetBIOS packets across the network. This
is done by defining a specific IPX packet for NetBIOS. Since IPX is a
derivative of XNS's IDP protocol, it follows the assigned packet types
given by Xerox as shown below:
Packet type 20 (0x14) identifies a NetBIOS packet and is designated as a propagated packet. The Destination Node field in the IPX header is set to 0xFFFFFFFFFFFF. When this packet is received by a router, the router checks the IPX header Packet Type field. If the Packet Type is 20 (0x14), the router examines the Transport Control field. If the Transport Control field is more than 8, the router will discard the packet. (A type 20 packet is propagated over a maximum of 8 networks.) The router then compares the value in the Network Number field with the network number of the segment it received the packet from. If these match, the router discards the packet to prevent it from being sent over the same segment twice. The router then puts the network number of the segment it received the packet from in the next available Network Number field and increments the Transport Control field before broadcasting the packet to all directly connected network segments not represented in the Network Number fields. Additional query words: IPX NWLINK TYPE 20 ROUTER ROUTING ntfaqmax
Keywords : kbnetwork ntprotocol NTSrvWkst |
Last Reviewed: February 13, 1999 © 2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Terms of Use. |