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Chapter 5 - appendix – Asus WL-300g User Manual

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5. Appendix

ASUS 802.11g Access Point

61

Chapter 5 - Appendix

RIP (Routing Information Protocol)

Routing Information Protocol(RIP1) is defined as a means by which routing
equipment can find the best path for transmitting data packets from one network
to another. Upgrades have been made to the RIP1 protocol, resulting in Routing
Information Protocol Version 2 (RIP2). RIP2 was developed to cover some of
the inefficiencies of RIP1.

Metric: RIP metric is a value of distance for the network. Usually RIP
increments the metric when the network information is received. Redistributed
routes' default metric offset is set to 1. These rules can be used to change the
metric offset only for the matched networks specified or excluded in the Route
Metric Offset table. But the metric offset of other networks is still set to 1.

SSID (Service Set ID)

SSID is a group name shared by every member of a wireless network. Only
client PCs with the same SSID are allowed to establish a connection.

Station

Any device containing IEEE 802.11 wireless medium access conformity.

Subnet Mask

A subnet mask is a set of four numbers configured like an IP address. It is used
to create IP address numbers used only within a particular network.

TCP (Transmission Control Protocol)

The standard transport level protocol that provides the full duplex, stream service
on which many application protocols depend. TCP allows a process or one
machine to send a stream of data to a process on another. Software implementing
TCP usually resides in the operating system and uses the IP to transmit
information across the network.

TKIP (Temporal Key Integrity Protocol)

TKIP is used in WPA to replace WEP with a new encryption algorithm that
is stronger than the WEP algorithm but that uses the calculation facilities
present on existing wireless devices to perform encryption operations.

WAN (Wide Area Network)

A system of LANs, connected together. A network that connects computers
located in separate areas, (i.e., different buildings, cities, countries). The Internet
is a wide area network.