On Thu, 06 Mar 2008 09:13:05 EST, Static Rez said: > Isn't it true that a TCP packet is typically 20 bytes, and a UDP packet > about 8? This is minus any additional data that has been added to the > packet. If this is true, then depending on the size of the pipe your sending > the data through, and the amount of congestion there might be, a UDP packet > would more easily and quickly hit its destination. If your network is so congested that the difference between a min-sized TCP packet and a min-sized UDP packet matters, you have *bigger* problems... (In reality, most NICs will refuse to blat out a packet much smaller than 64 bytes or so - there was a number of info-disclosure issues with some drivers that would try to send a 56 byte packet, and failed to zero out the 8 trailing bytes).
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