List of IP version numbers


s that hold Internet Protocol data carry a 4-bit IP version number as the first field of its header. Currently, only IPv4 and IPv6 packets are seen on the Internet, having IP version numbers 4 and 6, respectively.

IP version numbers


As the version number is carried in a 4-bit field, only numbers 0–15 can be assigned.
IP versionDescriptionYearStatus
0Internet Protocol, pre-v4N/AReserved.
1Experimental version1973Obsolete.
2Experimental version1977Obsolete.
3Experimental version1978Obsolete.
4Internet Protocol version 4 1981Active.
5Internet Stream Protocol 1979Obsolete; superseded by ST-II.
5Internet Stream Protocol 1987Obsolete; superseded by ST2+.
5Internet Stream Protocol 1995Obsolete.
6Simple Internet Protocol N/AObsolete; merged into IPv6 in 1995.
6Internet Protocol version 6 1995Active.
7TP/IX The Next Internet 1993Obsolete.
8P Internet Protocol 1994Obsolete; merged into SIP in 1993.
9TCP and UDP over Bigger Addresses 1992Obsolete.
9IPv91994April Fools' Day joke.
9Chinese IPv92004Abandoned.
10–14N/AN/AUnassigned.
15Version field sentinel valueN/AReserved.

History

During the development of the first version of the Internet Protocol in the 1970s, the initial experimental versions 1 to 3 were not standardized. The first working version that was widely deployed was assigned version number 4.
A separate protocol based on reliable connections was developed and assigned version 5.
IP version 7 was chosen in 1988 by R. Ullmann as the next IP version because he incorrectly assumed that version 6 was in use for ST-II. However, ST-II had reused version 5 of the original ST protocol.
In the early 1990s, when it became apparent that IPv4 could not sustain routing in a growing Internet, several new Internet Protocols were proposed. The Internet Protocol that finally emerged was assigned version number 6, being the lowest free number greater than 4.
The PIP protocol and TUBA protocol used versions 8 and 9, following version 7 for TP/IX.
In 2004, an IPv9 protocol was developed in China using 256-bit addresses.