TCP half-open: Difference between revisions

Content deleted Content added
m Going to take me awhile to live two instances of that typo down.
format endmatter
 
(27 intermediate revisions by 20 users not shown)
Line 1:
{{unreferenced|date=May 2017}}
A TCP connection is referred to as ''half-open'' when the station at one end of that TCP connection has crashed, or has otherwise removed the socket without formally notifying the other end of the TCP connection.
 
The term '''half-open''' refers to [[Transmission Control Protocol|TCP]] connections whose state is out of synchronization between the two communicating hosts, possibly due to a crash of one side. A connection which is in the process of being established is also known as '''embryonic connection'''. The lack of synchronization could be due to [[SYN flood|malicious intent]].
Due to the stateless nature of the Transmission Control Protocol, it is possible that if the application controlling the still-existing end of the connection is not expecting a response, then that socket may persist indefinitely in the state known as TCP half-open.
 
== RFC 793 ==
Note: A common misconception throughout the Internet is that the term TCP half-open applies to a partially-completed TCP handshake state. A better term for this unsynchronized kind of socket state is an [[Embryonic connection|embryonic]] state.
AAccording to [http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc0793.txt RFC 793], a TCP connection is referred to as ''half-open'' when the stationhost at one end of that TCP connection has crashed, or has otherwise removed the socket without formally notifying the other end. of If the TCPremaining end is idle, the connection may remain in the half-open state for unbounded periods of time.
 
== Stateful Firewall Timeout ==
Another circumstance that can lead to half-open connections is if a [[stateful firewall]] times out a connection that is idle for too long. In this case, the firewall clears its internal state, and if either side of the connection sends a packet, the firewall will drop the packet. This will often result in a half-open connection as the two sides of the connection can end up with inconsistent connection states.
 
== Embryonic connection ==
The term ''half-open connection'' can also be used to describe an '''embryonic connection''', i.e. a [[Transmission Control Protocol|TCP]] connection that is in the process of being established.
 
[[Transmission Control Protocol|TCP]] has a [[Three-way handshake|three state system]] for opening a connection. First, the originating endpoint (A) sends a [[SYN (TCP)|SYN packet]] to the destination (B). A is now in an embryonic state (specifically, SYN_SENT), and awaiting a response. B now updates its kernel information to indicate the incoming connection from A, and sends out a request to open a channel back (the [[SYN/ACK]] packet).
 
At this point, B is also in an embryonic state (specifically, SYN_RCVD). Note that B was put into this state by another machine, outside of B's control.
 
Under normal circumstances (see [[denial-of-service attack]] for deliberate failure cases), A will receive the SYN/ACK from B, update its tables (which now have enough information for A to both send and receive), and send a final ACK back to B.
 
Once B receives this final ACK, it also has sufficient information for two-way communication, and the connection is fully open. Both endpoints are now in an established state.
 
== See also ==
* [[SYN flood]]
* [[Transmission Control Protocol]]
* [[EmbryonicSYN connectioncookies]]
* [[Stateful firewall]]
 
== References ==
{{refbegin}}
*Twingate. (n.d.). ''What is a TCP Half Open Scan?''. Retrieved May 2, 2025, from [https://www.twingate.com/blog/glossary/tcp-half-open-scan](https://www.twingate.com/blog/glossary/tcp-half-open-scan)
*Palo Alto Networks. (n.d.). ''TCP Half Closed and TCP Time Wait Timers''. Retrieved May 2, 2025, from [https://docs.paloaltonetworks.com/pan-os/10-1/pan-os-networking-admin/session-settings-and-timeouts/tcp/tcp-half-closed-and-tcp-time-wait-timers](https://docs.paloaltonetworks.com/pan-os/10-1/pan-os-networking-admin/session-settings-and-timeouts/tcp/tcp-half-closed-and-tcp-time-wait-timers)
*Sanchit Gurukul. (n.d.). ''Understanding TCP Half-Open Connections''. Retrieved May 2, 2025, from [https://sanchitgurukul.com/understanding-tcp-half-open-connections](https://sanchitgurukul.com/understanding-tcp-half-open-connections)
* [[Category:Transmission Control Protocol|Half-Open]]
{{refend}}
 
== External links ==