Jumbogram


In packet-switched computer networks, a jumbogram is an internet-layer packet exceeding the standard maximum transmission unit of the underlying network technology. In contrast, large packets for link-layer technologies are referred to as jumbo frames.
The payload length field of IPv4 and IPv6 has a size of 16 bits, thus allowing data of up to. This theoretical limit for the Internet Protocol MTU, however, is reached only on networks that have a suitable link layer infrastructure. While IPv4 has no facilities to exceed its theoretical IP MTU limit, the designers of IPv6 have provided a protocol extension to permit packets of larger size. Thus, in the context of IPv6, a jumbogram is understood as an IPv6 packet carrying a payload larger than.

IPv6 jumbograms

An optional feature of IPv6, the jumbo payload option, allows the exchange of packets with payloads of up to one byte less than 4 GiB, by making use of a 32-bit length field. Historically, transport layer protocols, such as the Transmission Control Protocol and the User Datagram Protocol, include data size parameters limited to only 16 bits. The support for IPv6 jumbograms required a redesign in all Transport Layer protocols. The jumbo payload option and the transport-layer modifications are described in RFC 2675.