ya if they are on both side then.. if one side then not..
if a protocol is only classfull(RIPv1, IGRP) the command will have no effect, but in protocols that support vlsm and classless ip adressing it will enable the protocol to send the subnet mask in it's packets so that a router would not recognize only class networks, but also their subnets.
Subnet mask
Dear All, Clasful routing protocols will not support VLSM because it doesn't send the subnet mask information along with routing information. Classless routing protocols will support VLSM as because it s sending the subnet mask information with routing updates. Regards, Sivaraj C
OSPFRIP v2EIGRPOSPF, IS-IS and RIP v2 are the open standard IGPs. Also, Cisco's EIGRP.fm
There is a few great things about variable length subnet masking VLSM. The main great thing about it is that you can get a membership.
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.
yes
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).
if a protocol is only classfull(RIPv1, IGRP) the command will have no effect, but in protocols that support vlsm and classless ip adressing it will enable the protocol to send the subnet mask in it's packets so that a router would not recognize only class networks, but also their subnets.
Subnet mask
Subnet mask
Dear All, Clasful routing protocols will not support VLSM because it doesn't send the subnet mask information along with routing information. Classless routing protocols will support VLSM as because it s sending the subnet mask information with routing updates. Regards, Sivaraj C
OSPFRIP v2EIGRPOSPF, IS-IS and RIP v2 are the open standard IGPs. Also, Cisco's EIGRP.fm
There is a few great things about variable length subnet masking VLSM. The main great thing about it is that you can get a membership.
RIPv1 RIPv2
metric, network mask, neighbor router ID, administrative distance