Routing Protocols - Definitions Flashcards
pls
IGP
It’s a routing protocol that we would use to route between networks that are on our internal autonomous system.
OSPF
-Internal
- find shortest path between internal gateway
RIPv1
is a distance-vector interior gateway routing protocol used to distribute routing information within a small or medium-sized network.
RIPv2
support for Variable Length Subnet Masks (VLSM), which allows for more efficient use of IP address space, and the inclusion of authentication mechanisms for securing routing updates.
IS-IS
is a link-state interior gateway routing protocol used to distribute IP routing information throughout a network of routers within an autonomous system (
EIGRP
advanced distance-vector routing protocol used to dynamically route data within a network. Faster convergence and greater scalability compared to protocols like RIP. Supports IPv4&6, route summarization, load balancing, and support for VLSM.
BGP
THE ONLY EXTERNAL ONE! Path Vector (system hops, not router hops)
MTU
largest size of a data packet that can be transmitted over a network protocol without fragmentation.
FHRP
allowing multiple routers to act as a single virtual gateway, providing redundancy and ensuring uninterrupted connectivity in case of a router failure.
- HSRP (cisco)
-VRRP
-GLBP (Cisco)
GRE
describes it as a tunneling protocol used in computer networks to encapsulate packets from one network protocol within packets from a different network protocol.
-each friend has their own secret tunnel
mGRE
refers to a variant of the Generic Routing Encapsulation (GRE) tunneling protocol that allows multiple endpoints to communicate with each other over a single GRE tunnel.
-everyone shares the same tunnel