Posts Tagged ‘routing’

October 2 2008

How Home Networking Works

Fax machines, scanners, printers and other computers operate in the same way. Every device receives an address and a name. Software on these devices allows it to be configured so that its function is accessible to multiple computers on the same network.

At home network system also has the mail envelope or popular known as the routing data. This surrounds the data or the words on the letter. A home network comes in two main types: cabled and wireless. In a cabled network different wire bundles which are known as Ethernet cables with connectors on each end plug into either a network interface card, or NIC, in the printer, fax, computer or into a switch/router. Hubs or switches are simplified devices that allow physical connections between the components of a network.

June 18 2008

Basic RIP (Routing Information Protocol) Implementation

Basic Information Guide About How To Setting Up Routing Information Protocol (RIP) On Your Router And How To Use The Trubleshooting And The Debug Command For RIP Routing Protocol.

RIP (Routing Information Protocol) is the routing protocol and one format of Distance Vector by the nature of RIP that it will sending all routing table data by itself go out to neighbor router in every 30 second and work on UDP and on port 520 numbers, that’s why make RIP work slow and consume the very resource of router more when compare with other routing protocol such as OSPF Routing Protocol and EIGRP Routing Protocol these sending out for updated routing table only.

For the factor of choosing best route path on RIP, it will choose the routing path route that have least Hop Count, that is one factor for choosing by the topmost space or Maximum Hop Count of RIP that 15 router or 15 hop count only if have more 15 will can not seek the route path or inaccessible,

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