Reference Manual for the ProSafe VPN Firewall FVS318v3
Glossary
5
January 2005
IEEE 
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. This American organization was founded in 1963 and sets 
standards for computers and communications. 
IETF 
Internet Engineering Task Force. An organization responsible for providing engineering solutions for TCP/
IP networks. In the network management area, this group is responsible for the development of the SNMP 
protocol.
IKE
Internet Key Exchange. An automated method for exchanging and managing encryption keys between two 
VPN devices.
Internet Control Message Protocol
ICMP is an extension to the Internet Protocol (IP) that supports packets containing error, control, and 
informational messages. The PING command, for example, uses ICMP to test an Internet connection.
Internet Protocol
The method or protocol by which data is sent from one computer to another on the Internet. Each computer 
(known as a host) on the Internet has at least one IP address that uniquely identifies it among all other 
computers on the Internet. When you send or receive data (for example, an e-mail note or a Web page), the 
message gets divided into little chunks called packets. Each of these packets contains both the sender's 
Internet address and the receiver's address. Any packet is sent first to a gateway computer that understands a 
small part of the Internet. The gateway computer reads the destination address and forwards the packet to an 
adjacent gateway that in turn reads the destination address and so forth across the Internet until one gateway 
recognizes the packet as belonging to a computer within its immediate neighborhood or domain. That 
gateway then forwards the packet directly to the computer whose address is specified. 
 
Because a message is divided into a number of packets, each packet can, if necessary, be sent by a different 
route across the Internet. Packets can arrive in a different order than they were sent. The Internet Protocol 
just delivers them. It's up to another protocol, the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) to put them back in 
the right order. IP is a connectionless protocol, which means that there is no continuing connection between 
the end points that are communicating. Each packet that travels through the Internet is treated as an 
independent unit of data without any relation to any other unit of data. (The reason the packets do get put in 
the right order is because of TCP, the connection-oriented protocol that keeps track of the packet sequence in 
a message.) In the Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) communication model, IP is in Layer 3, the 
Networking Layer. The most widely used version of IP today is IP version 4 (IPv4). However, IP version 6 
(IPv6) is also beginning to be supported. IPv6 provides for much longer addresses and therefore for the 
possibility of many more Internet users. IPv6 includes the capabilities of IPv4 and any server that can 
support IPv6 packets can also support IPv4 packets.
IP
See “Internet Protocol”