The course is an introduction to network programming using the application programming interface known as sockets. In addition, several design alternatives for client/server applications will be presented along with tradeoffs. Upon successful completion of the course, the student should be able to develop network-aware applications that involve unicast and multicast communications from the grounds up.
Bachelor of Computer Science - 132 CRs
W. Richard Stevens, Bill Fenner, and Andrew Rudoff, Unix Network Programming, The Sockets Networking API, Volume 1, Addison-Wesley
| content serial | Description |
|---|
| 1 | Introduction to TCP/IP |
| 2 | The Network Layer: IP Suite |
| 3 | The Transport Layer: TCP |
| 4 | The Transport Layer: UDP |
| 5 | Elementary Sockets |
| 6 | Elementary TCP Sockets |
| 7 | TCP Client/Server Example |
| 8 | I/O Multiplexing |
| 9 | Socket Options |
| 10 | Elementary UDP Sockets |
| 11 | Name and Address Conversions |
| 12 | Multicasting |
| 13 | Multicasting cont. |
| 14 | Client/Server Design Alternatives |
| 15 | Presentation of projects |
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