Wireshark-users: Re: [Wireshark-users] question about TCP flow behavior
From: Tal Bar-Or <tbaror@xxxxxxxxx>
Date: Fri, 16 Apr 2010 12:27:07 +0300
Hi Boaz,

For My opinion that's mean that's HOST B sends data while HOST A receive it and the ACK is calculated (incremented) with the amount of data payload size.
btw i would disable relative seq for TCP  only if iwould do capture from both side to compare seq ACK.

Regards
Tal,

On Fri, Apr 16, 2010 at 12:12 PM, Boaz Galil <boaz20@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Dear Experts,

 

I am trying to review a TCP flow using wire shark (I have removed the “relative seq for TCP”).

My questions are this:

During the TCP flow I see the following:

Server A sends Server B [PSH,ACK] seq=1058555096 ACK=2917173962

Server B sends Server A [ACK] seq=2917173962 ACK=1058555108

Server A sends Server B [PSH,ACK] seq=1058555108, ACK=2917173962

Server B sends Server A [ACK] seq=2917173962 ACK=1058556516

And so on, so Server B always sends ACK on a sequence with higher number…

Does anyone know what the explanation of this behavior is? Is this a normal TCP flow behavior?

 

Please don’t hesitate to contact me if you have any questions or comments.

Thanks in advance,

 

Boaz Galil



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Boaz.

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Tal Bar-or