RIP is a distance vector routing protocol that is used in thousands of networks. When a router receives a routing update that includes a new or changed route, the router updates its routing table to reflect this new route. These updates, called triggered updates, are sent independently of the regularly scheduled updates that RIP routers forward.
RIP is a distance vector routing protocol that is used in thousands of networks. When a router receives a routing update that includes a new or changed route, the router updates its routing table to reflect this new route. These updates, called triggered updates, are sent independently of the regularly scheduled updates that RIP routers forward.
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RIP is a distance vector routing protocol that is used in thousands of networks. When a router receives a routing update that includes a new or changed route, the router updates its routing table to reflect this new route. These updates, called triggered updates, are sent independently of the regularly scheduled updates that RIP routers forward.
Direitos autorais:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Formatos disponíveis
Baixe no formato PDF, TXT ou leia online no Scribd
Routing Information Protocol Routing Information Protocol (RIP) is a distance vector routing protocol that is used in thousands of networks throughout the world. Initially specified in RFC 1058 Is a distance vector routing protocol Uses hop count as the metric for path selection Defines a hop count greater than 15 as an unreachable route Sends routing table contents every 30 seconds, by default
When a router receives a routing update that includes a
new or changed route, the router updates its routing table to reflect this new route. At each router, the hop count value is increased by one. The router uses the local network address of the directly connected router which sent the update as the next hop address.
After updating its routing table, the router immediately
begins transmitting routing updates in order to inform other network routers of the change. These updates, called triggered updates, are sent independently of the regularly scheduled updates that RIP routers forward.
Allows a maximum of 15 hops, so it can only be used
for networks that connect no more than 16 routers in series. Periodically sends complete copies of the entire routing table to directly connected neighbors. In a large network, this can cause a significant amount of network traffic each time there is an update. Converges slowly on larger networks, when the network changes.