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In a packet-switched data network, what is used to reassemble the packets in the correct order at the destination device?
The details vary enormously from protocol to protocol, but the basics are the same for all of them. A stream of data is split into packets, the packet has a header which contains (amongst other things) the destination for the packet. The network uses the destination address to deliver the network to the correct destination.
A typical VOIP to VOIP call transfers from your local network to the remote VOIP server. When the server receives the voice call packets, the destination header of these packets is read to direct them to the destination. These servers are connected to SIP trunk lines or termination routes. The voice packets are directed to these routes through this server.
switch
The packets will be delivered and reassembled at the destination.
1. Filter packets leaving your network with source addresses that do not originate inside your network. 2. Filter packets entering your network with a broadcast address for a destination
To establish connectivity between two computers, TCP/IP Protocol finds the destination device & then slices information into small chunks called Packets. These packets are wrapped with some information which helps packet sail through number of intermediary devices to the destination. After reaching destination, packets are reassembled into data onto the End device.
Cisco load balancers allows a router to use multiple destination paths to a destination when forwarding packets. It is part of the wireless internet service provider network.
The router will install both routes in the routing table and load balance between the two.
data link layer
This Answer for Your Question : sequence number
Generally speaking, routers will unicast-forward incoming packets which have a network broadcast address as destination, unless they are directly connected to that network/subnet and therefore know that the destination address is a broadcast address