Configuring ripng, Introduction to ripng, Ripng working mechanism – H3C Technologies H3C S12500 Series Switches User Manual

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Configuring RIPng

Introduction to RIPng

RIP next generation (RIPng) is an extension of RIP-2 for IPv4. Most RIP concepts are applicable in RIPng.
RIPng for IPv6 has the following basic differences from RIP:

UDP port number—RIPng uses UDP port 521 for sending and receiving routing information.

Multicast address—RIPng uses FF02::9 as the link-local-router multicast address.

Destination Prefix—128-bit destination address prefix.

Next hop—128-bit IPv6 address.

Source address—RIPng uses FE80::/10 as the link-local source address.

RIPng working mechanism

RIPng is a routing protocol based on the distance vector (D-V) algorithm. RIPng uses UDP packets to

exchange routing information through port 521.
RIPng uses a hop count to measure the distance to a destination. The hop count is referred to as metric

or cost. The hop count from a router to a directly connected network is 0. The hop count between two
directly connected routers is 1. When the hop count is greater than or equal to 16, the destination

network or host is unreachable.
By default, the routing update is sent every 30 seconds. If the router receives no routing updates from a

neighbor within 180 seconds, the routes learned from the neighbor are considered unreachable. Within
another 240 seconds, if no routing update is received, the router removes these routes from the routing

table.
RIPng supports split horizon and poison reverse to prevent routing loops and route redistribution.
Each RIPng router maintains a routing database, including route entries of all reachable destinations. A
route entry contains the following information:

Destination address—IPv6 address of a host or a network.

Next hop address—IPv6 address of a neighbor along the path to the destination.

Egress interface—Output interface that forwards IPv6 packets.

Metric—Cost from the local router to the destination.

Route time—Time elapsed since a route entry was last changed. Each time a route entry is modified,
the routing time is set to 0.

Route tag—Identifies the route used in a routing policy to control routing information. For
information about routing policy, see "Configuring routing policies."

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