Network Layer Protocol - meaning and definition. What is Network Layer Protocol
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What (who) is Network Layer Protocol - definition

IMPLEMENTATION OF A COMPUTER NETWORKING PROTOCOL SUITE
Protocol suite; Network stack; Network protocol stack; Protocol suites; Protocol hierarchy; Communications stack; Networking stack; Layered protocol; Protocol family; Signalling stack; Protocol layering; Spanning Layer; Spanning layer
  • Protocol stack of the [[OSI model]]

layer 3         
LAYER 3 OF THE OSI MODEL FOR COMPUTER COMMUNICATION
Layer 3; OSI layer 3; Internetwork layer; Network layers; OSI Layer 3; Network Layer; Network-layer; Layer-3
L2TP         
COMPUTER NETWORK PROTOCOL
NAS/LAC; L2TP; L2P; L2tp; Layer 2 tunneling Protocol; L2TP/IPsec; L2TP Network Server; L2TPv2
Layer 2 Tunneling Protocol (Reference: PPP, VPN, IP, RFC 2661)
network layer         
LAYER 3 OF THE OSI MODEL FOR COMPUTER COMMUNICATION
Layer 3; OSI layer 3; Internetwork layer; Network layers; OSI Layer 3; Network Layer; Network-layer; Layer-3
<networking> (communications subnet layer) The third lowest layer in the OSI seven layer model. The network layer determines routing of packets of data from sender to receiver via the data link layer and is used by the transport layer. The most common network layer protocol is IP. (1994-12-13)

Wikipedia

Protocol stack

The protocol stack or network stack is an implementation of a computer networking protocol suite or protocol family. Some of these terms are used interchangeably but strictly speaking, the suite is the definition of the communication protocols, and the stack is the software implementation of them.

Individual protocols within a suite are often designed with a single purpose in mind. This modularization simplifies design and evaluation. Because each protocol module usually communicates with two others, they are commonly imagined as layers in a stack of protocols. The lowest protocol always deals with low-level interaction with the communications hardware. Each higher layer adds additional capabilities. User applications usually deal only with the topmost layers.