TCP/IP Stack in Windows Server 2008 vs Windows 7 Ultimate

tcpipwindows 7windows-server-2008

Does anyone know the details as to the differences between the TCP/IP stack in Windows Server 2008 (Standard) vs Windows 7 Ultimate?

This question pertains to TCP/IP ONLY.

I know that Windows 7 and Server 2008 have a unified driver model — so the driver portion of the TCP/IP stack is, theoretically the same.

On precisely the same hardware, supporting a heavily loaded TCP/IP app, will the Server 2008 TCP/IP stack offer any advantages over a out of the box Windows 7 Ultimate box?

I have heard many (vauge) insinuations as to advantages of the server's stack, but have never seen anything concrete like: Server supports a XYZ megabyte flux capacitor buffer, while Windows 7 only supports a 2 mb flux capacitor buffer…

A link to a tech doc or site outlining the differences would be awesome.

Best Answer

Here is a doc on server but boy, geek technical info for 7 is as rare as common sense at my company...

TCP/IP on 2008 link text