What Is Time-to-Live (TTL)?

Table of Contents

Time to live (TTL) is a system that limits the lifetime of data packets traveling across the internet before being discarded by a router. 

In addition, TTL (or hop limit) prevents the packet sent from continuing indefinitely to hop from router to router. TTL is mainly used to enhance performance and manage data caching. 

Packet TTL can also help determine how long a packet has circulated and inform the sender about its path throughout the net.

How Does TTL Work?

Every packet created stores a numerical value limiting the time of its movement through a network. Whenever a router receives a packet, it subtracts one from the TTL count and passes it to the following network location. If the subtraction leaves a zero count, the router discards the packet and sends an ICMP message to the initiating host.

Share

Recommended From Elementor

What is Kubernetes?

Kubernetes is an open-source, extensible, portable platform that automates software management, deployment, and scaling of containerized services and workloads

Read More »

What is Domain Privacy?

Domain privacy protection is a service that keeps contact information anonymous by replacing authentic contact details with those of the privacy service and randomly generated email addresses.

Read More »

The Future
of Web Creation. Straight to
Your Inbox.

What Intrests You?


Great!

Awsome content is on the way.