B.1 Introduction
When a new feature is added to TCP, such as the
long fat pipe support defined in RFC 1323, support is required only
in the hosts using TCP; no changes are required in the routers.
These RFC 1323 changes, for example, are slowly appearing in host
implementations of TCP, and when a new TCP connection is
established, each end can determine if the other end supports the
new feature. If both hosts support the feature, it can be used.
This differs from changes being made to the IP
layer, such as multicasting at the end of the 1980s and IPv6 in the
mid-1990s, because these new features require changes in all the
hosts and all the routers. But,
what if people want to start using the new features without having
to wait for all the systems to be upgraded? To do this, a
virtual network is established on
top of the existing IPv4 Internet using tunnels.
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