RIP v1 is a classfull distance vector protocol.
It send and receive v1 informations only
RIPv1 RIPv2
RIPv1
Routing Information Protocol (RIP) and Interior Gateway Routing Protocol (IGRP) are two very popular Distance Vector routing protocols
RIPv2 sends subnetmasks in the routing table updates. RIPv1 does not, which causes it be class-full.
1) It is a distance vector routing protocol. 2) The data portion of a RIP message is encapsulated into a UDP segment.
RIP V1 dose not support CIDR or VLSM as it a clasfull routing protocol that dose not include the subnet mask.. however if you were to use RIPV2 you could use static routing with it as it is a classless protocol and dose incoperate the subset mask in the update
Classful vs. Classless RIPv1 is a classful protocol, meaning that the subnet mask is not included in the routing updates. With RIP, only the default subnet mask is used to identify networks. RIP v2 is a classless protocol, meaning that the subnet mask IS included in the routing tables.. RIPv2 supports variable subnet masks (VLSM).
RIP VERSIONV1 can be seen to exclude subnet information from routing updates, this is because ripv1 is a classful routing protocol and does not support VSLM, this was corrected in RIPv2 where ripv2 does send out subnet mask's in the form of a prefix eg /24 which is the subnet mask of 255.255.255.0 or a class c address.
Dynamically, as related to a routing protocol is a type of networking technique whereby the routing protocol creates, updates and maintains the dynamic routing table.
Because RIPv1 is a classless protocol, it does not support this access. RIPv1 does not support discontiguous networks. RIPv1 does not support load balancing. RIPv1 does not support automatic summarization.
link-state routing protocol
If your router or routers are using Routing Information Protocol version 1 (RIPv1), the RIP Listener service can be turned on to listen for updates sent by the router(s). It will add the new routes to the routing table on the local machine.