The network as an IP address; the corresponding subnet mask (often shown in shortcut notation, e.g., /24), the next-hop address; the interface through which data must be sent to that network; how it was learned (directly connected, static configuration, or some routing protocol); the administrative distance; the cost or metric.
The metric value of the route The address of the logical destination network The type of learning method involved
route#debug ip routing
what type of static route does the administrator configure
A Admin can set the Administrative Distance (AD) on a static route to tell the router how reliable the route is. Dynamic routing protocols use metrics to determine route reliability.
R1 is originating the route 172.30.200.32/28. Automatic summarization is disabled. The 172.30.200.16/28 network is one hop away from R1. A classful routing protocol is being used.
Distance vector protocols exchange their routing tables, and add a metric to each route. Link-state routing protols exchange topology information, then calculate the routes. As a result, there are the following fundamental differences:The information that is exchanged - routing table vs. topology information.Link-state protocols know the topology of the network (or an area); distance vector routing protocols don't.When the best route is calculated: in distance-vector routing protocols, a metric is added while the route is propagated from router to router. In link-state protocols, the best route is calculated separately by each router, only after having complete topology information.
- provide routers with up-to-date routing tables - consume bandwidth to exchange route information
Provide information about the complete IP routing table .
A hop. :)
*router is a device use to route communication or connection *routing is the process *router is a device use to route communication or connection *routing is the process
It uses hop count in route selection. It is a distance-vector protocol.
RIP listener waits for route updates sent by routers that use the routing information protocol in a corporate LAN.