3 rip configuration, Rip overview, Operation of rip – H3C Technologies H3C S7500E Series Switches User Manual

Page 36: Introduction, Rip routing table, Rip configuration

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RIP Configuration

The term “router” in this document refers to a router in a generic sense or a Layer 3 switch.

When configuring RIP, go to these sections for information you are interested in:

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RIP Overview

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Configuring RIP Basic Functions

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Configuring RIP Route Control

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Configuring RIP Network Optimization

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Configuring BFD for RIP

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Displaying and Maintaining RIP

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RIP Configuration Examples

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Troubleshooting RIP

RIP Overview

RIP is a simple Interior Gateway Protocol (IGP), mainly used in small-sized networks, such as

academic networks and simple LANs. RIP is not applicable to complex networks.

RIP is still widely used in practical networking due to easier implementation, configuration and

maintenance than OSPF and IS-IS.

Operation of RIP

Introduction

RIP is a distance vector routing protocol, using UDP packets for exchanging information through port

520.

RIP uses a hop count to measure the distance to a destination. The hop count from a router to a

directly connected network is 0. The hop count from a router to a directly connected router is 1. To limit

convergence time, the range of RIP metric value is from 0 to 15. A metric value of 16 (or greater) is

considered infinite, which means the destination network is unreachable. That is why RIP is not

suitable for large-scaled networks.

RIP prevents routing loops by implementing the split horizon and poison reverse functions.

RIP routing table

A RIP router has a routing table containing routing entries of all reachable destinations, and each

routing entry contains:

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Destination address: IP address of a host or a network.

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