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Home/ Questions/Q 6818919
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 26, 20262026-05-26T21:14:12+00:00 2026-05-26T21:14:12+00:00

What exactly is a TCP connection? I understand there isn’t a physical connection from

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What exactly is a TCP connection?
I understand there isn’t a physical connection from the client to server. Is this connection just the client’s socket being linked with the new socket created by the server after the three-way-handshake?
Thereafter once the “connection” is set up, the sockets on either ends of the connection then know where to send their packets.

How does this differ from the way UDP functions other than the initial handshake with TCP?
Is it that each server socket only has one client that sends packets to that particular socket?

What are some possible advantages of having a dedicated connection between hosts? My understanding of TCP and UDP is still very basic, so broad generalizations should suffice.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-26T21:14:13+00:00Added an answer on May 26, 2026 at 9:14 pm

    Let’s break this up into parts. First of, the network is based in IP, which is a protocol that assigns an address to each network node, and which allows you to send small amounts of data (usually up to 64kB, but typically only 1500B) from one node to another.

    That by itself isn’t worth much yet, because we can’t make any checks that the data actually arrived, and that it arrived in the right order. If we want an abstract mechanism to transmit arbitrary amounts of data and ensure that they arrived, we need another protocol on top of the network that handles this “transmission”. And that’s the purpose of TCP.

    However, in parallel to TCP, there’s another “transmission” protocol that doesn’t do any checking at all and has no reliability, UDP. UDP is just a thin wrapper around raw IP packets, which adds a little bit of meta data (like a port number).

    UDP is still useful, though, since there are many situations in which the data integrity is already handed off to an even higher protocol, so there’s no need for a complex transmission protocol. This is for example used in virtual networking services, where another instance of TCP/IP is typically run over a UDP channel. (Making the channel use a reliable protocol like TCP can actually have disastrous consequences in that case due to resend cascades.)

    So the term “TCP connection” refers to the application of the TCProtocol. The protocol is stateful, naturally, and typically proceeds in a SYN-ACK-data-FIN sequence, or SYN/RST in case of a rejected transmission; both peers maintain a status of the connection (handshake, established, closing, closed.) TCP also introduces the terms “server” and “client”, the server being the peer that listen()s for an incoming connection.

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