RIP routing updates are sent every 30 seconds by default. In RIP version 1, they are sent as a broadcast. In RIP version 2, they are sent to a special multicast address.
RIP listener waits for route updates sent by routers that use the routing information protocol in a corporate LAN.
RIP v2 supports subnets of different sizes. So I guess it would be the router that can, or can not, be configured to summarize routes. (This would not be possible in RIP v1; the size of the subnet is implicit, it is not sent with the routing updates.)RIP v2 supports subnets of different sizes. So I guess it would be the router that can, or can not, be configured to summarize routes. (This would not be possible in RIP v1; the size of the subnet is implicit, it is not sent with the routing updates.)RIP v2 supports subnets of different sizes. So I guess it would be the router that can, or can not, be configured to summarize routes. (This would not be possible in RIP v1; the size of the subnet is implicit, it is not sent with the routing updates.)RIP v2 supports subnets of different sizes. So I guess it would be the router that can, or can not, be configured to summarize routes. (This would not be possible in RIP v1; the size of the subnet is implicit, it is not sent with the routing updates.)
Router(config-if)#no routing
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.
to identify the directly connected networks that will be announced in RIP updates
Every 20 Milliseconds it updates.
Two Characteristics: RIP is an example of distance vector routing protocols. Updates are periodic and include the entire routing table
Every 30 seconds by default in RIP version 1.
1) It is a distance vector routing protocol. 2) The data portion of a RIP message is encapsulated into a UDP segment.
the purpose of rip is used in routing........
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.
Both uses Distance vector algorithm...... . updates the routing table for every 30 seconds. and in OSPF requires hoping reneval of routing table