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Message Send Protocol

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Message Send Protocol (MSP) is an application layer protocol used to send a short message between nodes on a network. The original version of the protocol was published in 1990.[1] It was updated as Message Send Protocol 2 in 1992.[2]

TCP-based service

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One message send service is defined as a connection-based application on TCP. A service listens for TCP connections on port 18. Once a connection is established, a short message is transmitted from the sender to the receiver over the connection. The sender closes the connection after sending the message.

UDP-based service

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Another message send service is defined as a datagram-based application on UDP. A service listens for UDP datagrams on port 18. When a datagram is received by the receiver, an answering datagram is sent back to the sender containing exactly the same data.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Nelson, Russell (June 1990). Message Send Protocol. IETF. doi:10.17487/RFC1159. RFC 1159.
  2. ^ Nelson, Russell; Arnold, Geoff (April 1992). Message Send Protocol 2. IETF. doi:10.17487/RFC1312. RFC 1312.