다음을 통해 공유


TCP Keep-Alive Messages (Windows CE 5.0)

Send Feedback

A TCP keep-alive packet is simply an ACK with the sequence number set to one less than the current sequence number for the connection. A host receiving one of these ACKs will respond with an ACK for the current sequence number. Keep-alives can be used to verify that the computer at the remote end of a connection is still available. TCP keep-alives can be sent once every KeepAliveTime (defaults to 7,200,000 milliseconds or 2 hours), if no other data or higher-level keep-alives have been carried over the TCP connection. If there is no response to a keep-alive, it is repeated once every KeepAliveInterval seconds. KeepAliveInterval defaults to 1 second. NetBT connections, such as those used by many parts of the Microsoft networking functionality, send NetBIOS keep-alives more frequently, so usually no TCP keep-alives will be sent on a NetBIOS connection. TCP keep-alives are disabled by default, but Windows Sockets applications can use the SetSockOpt function to enable them.

See Also

Transmission Control Protocol (TCP)

Send Feedback on this topic to the authors

Feedback FAQs

© 2006 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.