A routable protocol contains a network address as well as a device address. Non-routable protocol, on the other hand, regulate the transfer of data and always makes use of interior routing system to transmit data.
There are two types of Protocols according to mechanism:Routable & Non RoutableNon Routable protocols work on Broadcast & doesn't maintain tables whereas Routable (Routed) protocols are designed to work in larger networks & tables are maintained dynamically on Network devices.Internet is vast & constitutes multiple Networks. Routable Protocols route information across Internet devices between Source to Destination Network.
A routing protocol refers to a protocol that is only used between routers, such as OSPF and EIGRP. A routed protocol, meanwhile, refers to a protocol wherein data can be routed, such a IP, AppleTalk, and IPX.
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A procedure is a set way to do something. A step by step process. Protocols are guidelines only on how to do something.
Interior routing protocols are used to communicate within a single autonomous system. Exterior routing protocols are used to communicate between multiple autonomous systems.
Classless protocols send a subnet mask with each route advertisement
The main difference between a CD driver and a DVD driver have to do with the protocols that operated individual programs.
Communication protocols are the rules than govern use of different types of media.
I had assumed that corporate and home routers/networks worked in the same way, so I explained how NAT works, and the difference between a non-routable private IP assigned to an individual computer and a public one which would actually belong to the router or proxy server...
Routing protocols are used by routers (RIP, EIGRP, OSPF) Routed protocols are the actual protocols on the wire (TCP/IP)
AppleTalk and NetBEUI are both networking protocols used in local area networks (LANs). AppleTalk, developed by Apple Inc., was primarily used for networking Macintosh computers, allowing them to communicate and share resources. NetBEUI (NetBIOS Extended User Interface), created by IBM and Microsoft, is a simple, non-routable protocol designed for small networks, facilitating communication between Windows-based machines. Both protocols have largely been replaced by more robust and scalable networking standards like TCP/IP.
These protocols are higher level CAN bus protocols. They both use the CAN 2.0B standard for the physical and data link layer. Each protocol, however, has different standards for the higher layers in the OSI model, and thus the way in which data is transmitted and interpreted is unique to each.