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Rip timers, Routing loops prevention, Operation of rip – H3C Technologies H3C WX3000E Series Wireless Switches User Manual

Page 155: Rip version

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Route time—Time elapsed since the routing entry was last updated. The time is reset to 0 every time

the routing entry is updated.

Route tag—Identifies a route, used in a routing policy to flexibly control routes.

RIP timers

RIP employs the following timers—update, timeout, suppress, and garbage-collect.

The update timer defines the interval between routing updates.

The timeout timer defines the route aging time. If no update for a route is received within the aging
time, the metric of the route is set to 16 in the routing table.

The suppress timer defines how long a RIP route stays in the suppressed state. When the metric of
a route is 16, the route enters the suppressed state. In the suppressed state, only routes which come

from the same neighbor and whose metric is less than 16 will be received by the router to replace

unreachable routes.

The garbage-collect timer defines the interval from when the metric of a route becomes 16 to when

it is deleted from the routing table. During the garbage-collect timer length, RIP advertises the route
with the routing metric set to 16. If no update is announced for that route after the garbage-collect

timer expires, the route will be deleted from the routing table.

Routing loops prevention

RIP is a distance vector (D-V) routing protocol. Since a RIP router advertises its own routing table to

neighbors, routing loops may occur.
RIP uses the following mechanisms to prevent routing loops:

Counting to infinity—The metric value of 16 is defined as unreachable. When a routing loop occurs,
the metric value of the route will increment to 16.

Split horizon—A router does not send the routing information learned from a neighbor to the
neighbor to prevent routing loops and save bandwidth.

Poison reverse—A router sets the metric of routes received from a neighbor to 16 and sends back
these routes to the neighbor to help delete such information from the neighbor’s routing table.

Triggered updates—A router advertises updates once the metric of a route is changed rather than
after the update period expires to speed up network convergence.

Operation of RIP

The following procedure describes how RIP works.

1.

After RIP is enabled, the router sends request messages to neighboring routers. Neighboring
routers return Response messages including information about their routing tables.

2.

After receiving this information, the router updates its local routing table, and sends triggered

update messages to its neighbors. All routers on the network do this to keep the latest routing
information.

3.

By default, a RIP router sends its routing table to neighbors every 30 seconds.

4.

RIP ages out routes by adopting an aging mechanism to keep only valid routes.

RIP version

RIP has the following versions: RIPv1 and RIPv2.