RIP v1 is a classfull distance vector protocol.It send and receive v1 informations only
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.
The router needs a routing table, to know where to send IP packets. The purpose of dynamic routing is to update the routing tables automatically. This means you need much less configuration, and the network dynamically adjusts to topology changes (for example, a router is added, or a cable has a bad connection).
The router discards the packet.The router forwards the packet out the interface indicated by the default route entry.
The router only needs to know the next-hop address; in other words, it sends the data to the next router; this next router then takes its own decision.Each router maintains a routing table, with information about where to send IP packets. The information is stored on a per-network basis. When the router receives an IP packet, it consults the routing table, to see what is the next-hop address, and through which interface it must send the packet.The router only needs to know the next-hop address; in other words, it sends the data to the next router; this next router then takes its own decision.Each router maintains a routing table, with information about where to send IP packets. The information is stored on a per-network basis. When the router receives an IP packet, it consults the routing table, to see what is the next-hop address, and through which interface it must send the packet.The router only needs to know the next-hop address; in other words, it sends the data to the next router; this next router then takes its own decision.Each router maintains a routing table, with information about where to send IP packets. The information is stored on a per-network basis. When the router receives an IP packet, it consults the routing table, to see what is the next-hop address, and through which interface it must send the packet.The router only needs to know the next-hop address; in other words, it sends the data to the next router; this next router then takes its own decision.Each router maintains a routing table, with information about where to send IP packets. The information is stored on a per-network basis. When the router receives an IP packet, it consults the routing table, to see what is the next-hop address, and through which interface it must send the packet.
It is typical for older routing protocols of the "distance vector" type, such as RIP, or IGRP, to send out their routing tables regularly to neighbors. By default, RIP does this every 30 seconds, while IGRP does it every 90 seconds.
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.
They send their routing tables to directly connected neighbors.
If you meant "router", you may want to ask a separate question. A route is simply the path through which data travels. A router or similar equipment must keep a routing table - a table of routes, which tells it where to send data for different destinations.
The routing number for Capital One is 056009482 . The routing number is used to send wire transfers in the United States.
Destination-Sequenced Distance-Vector Routing (DSDV) is a table-driven routing scheme for ad hoc mobile networks based on the Bellman-Ford algorithm. It was developed by C. Perkins and P.Bhagwat in 1994. The main contribution of the algorithm was to solve the routing loop problem. Each entry in the routing table contains a sequence number, the sequence numbers are generally even if a link is present; else, an odd number is used. The number is generated by the destination, and the emitter needs to send out the next update with this number. Routing information is distributed between nodes by sending full dumps infrequently and smaller incremental updates more frequently.
please send me b a time table please send me b a time table