- Open Add or Remove Programs in Control Panel.
- Click Add/Remove Windows Components.
- In Components, click Networking Services, and then click Details.
- In Subcomponents of Networking Services, click Simple TCP/IP Services, and then click OK.
- Click Next.
- If prompted to do so, type the path where the
Windows XP distribution files are located, and then click OK. - Click Finish and then click Close.
Notes
· To open Add or Remove Programs, click Start, point to Settings, click Control Panel, and then click Add or Remove Programs.
· You must be logged on as an administrator or a member of the Administrators group in order to complete this procedure. If your computer is connected to a network, network policy settings might also prevent you from completing this procedure.
· Simple TCP/IP Services for Windows XP provides support for the optional TCP/IP protocol services listed in the following table.
Protocol | Description | RFC |
Character Generator (CHARGEN) | Sends data made up of the set of 95 printable ASCII characters. Useful as a debugging tool for testing or troubleshooting line printers. | 864 |
Daytime | Returns messages containing the day of the week, month, day, year, current time (in hh:mm:ss format), and time-zone information. Some programs can use the output from this service for debugging or monitoring variations in system clock time or on a different host. | 867 |
Discard | Discards all messages received on this port without response or acknowledgment. Can serve as a null port for receiving and routing | 863 |
Echo | Echoes back data from any messages it receives on this server port. Can be useful as a network debugging and monitoring tool. | 862 |
Quote of the Day (QUOTE) | Returns a quotation as one or more lines of text in a message. Quotations are taken at random from the following file: systemroot\System32\Drivers\Etc\Quotes. A sample quote file is installed with the Simple TCP/IP Services. If this file is missing, the quote service fails. | 865 |
· All of these protocol services are classified as elective Internet standards and are defined and described in the specified Request for Comments (RFC) document listed in the table. For more information on these protocol services, see the RFCs.
· Do not install Simple TCP/IP Services unless you specifically need this computer to support communication with other systems that use these protocol services.
· After Simple TCP/IP Services are installed, you cannot enable or disable the separate services individually.
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