Absolutely. Most TCP stacks open with a smallish advertised TCP window
and then embiggen it. (Whether they are actually changing available
buffers I don't know, but it was they advertise).
Many traffic shaping device employ techniques that alter ACKs and the
advertised to try and smoothly control traffic control without
discards.
Regards, Martin
MartinVisser99@xxxxxxxxx
On 2 March 2011 11:07, Andrej van der Zee <andrejvanderzee@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Hi Guy,
>
> Thanks for your explanation about windows advertisements and windows updates.
>
> Does TCP allow for a receiver to increase its buffer size (i.e. change
> its maximum receive window) in order to efficiently respond to network
> conditions?
>
> Cheers,
> Andrej
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