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(Routing Information Protocol) A protocol defined by RFC 1058 that specifies how routers exchange routing table information. With RIP, routers periodically exchange entire tables.
The Routing Information Protocol enables routers to exchange routing tables.
Routing Information Protocol, a distance-vector routing protocol used on many TCP/IP internetworks and IPX networks. The distance vector algorithm uses a fewest-hops routing calculation method.
An interior or intra-domain routing protocol that uses distance-vector routing algorithms. RIP is used on the Internet and is common in the NetWare environment as a method for exchanging routing information between routers.
Routing Information Protocol. An Interior Gateway Protocol (IGP) supplied with Berkeley UNIX.
Routing Information Protocol is a popular interior gateway protocol that classifies routers as active and passive.
Routing Information Protocol. A distance vector, as opposed to link state, routing protocol. It is an Internet standard IGP defined in STD 34, RFC 1058 (updated by RFC 1388). See also: Interior Gateway Protocol, Open Shortest Path First....
Routing Information Protocol, it is a widely used protocol for managing router information within a self-contained network such as a corporate local area network or an interconnected group of such LANs.
Routing protocol and part of the TCP/IP suite. RIP determines a route based on the smallest hop count between source and destination. RIP determines the smallest hop count by communicating with other routers within the network. Only use RIP if the target router also utilizes RIP.
(n.) routing information packet is an IGP supplied with BSD networking Unix.
(Router Information Protocol) - a standard mechanism for exchanging routes (paths) between routers.
Routing Information Protocol. An IGP supplied with Berkeley UNIX systems. It is the most common IGP in the Internet. RIP uses hop count as a routing metric. The largest allowable hop count for RIP is 16.
Routing Information Protocol. An industry standard distance vector routing protocol used in small to medium sized IP and IPX internetworks.
a distance vector-based protocol that provides a measure of distance, or hops, from a transmitting workstation to a receiving workstation.
Routing Information Protocol. A routing protocol that determines the best route based on the smallest number of hops between routers. As an interior gateway protocol, RIP is used within an autonomous system. Also see IGP, routing protocol. Compare with OSPF.
Routing Information Protocol. A procedure within TCP/IP that allows routers to exchange routing information with other routers. A variant also exists for IPX/SPX, which nobody uses any more..
Routing Information Protocol Protocol used by router s to determine the best path through the network. The best path is determined as the path with the fewest router Protocol traffic is high when using RIP, so is being replaced with OSPF.
Routing Information Protocol. The protocol used by Berkeley 4BSD Unix systems to exchange routing information among a small group of computers. Implemented by the Unix program "routed", RIP is derived from an earlier protocol of the same name developed at Xerox.
Routing Information Protocol. Enables a router to exchange routing information with a neighboring router. See also router.
Routing Information Protocol. A protocol used for the transmission of IP routing information.
Routing Information Protocol. A distance vector protocol in the IP suite (used by IP and IPX network-layer protocols) that enables routers in the same autonomous system to exchange routing information by means of periodic updates. For RIP, the "best" path to a destination is the path with the fewest hops. RIP computes distance as a metric, usually the number of hops from the origin network to the target network. Remote Imaging Protocol. A graphics format designed for transmitting graphics over low-speed lines.
Routing Information Protocol. A simple routing protocol that is part of the TCP/IP protocol suite. It determines a route based on the smallest hop count between source and destination. RIP is a distance vector protocol that routinely broadcasts routing information to its neighboring routers and is known to waste bandwidth.
A routing protocol used by NetWare's IPX network protocol. RIP allows NetWare routers to create and update a router table (or database) of current information about other routers on the internetwork. Routers send periodic broadcasts of RIP packets to other routers on the network to keep all routers on the network synchronized.
(Routing Information Protocol) A basic Interirior Gateway Protocol. Updating of modified routing information is slow and liable to error, so OSPF is more likely to be used in most situations.
See: Routing Information Protocol
Routing Information Protocol. A simple routing protocol that is part of the TCP/IP protocol suite and the most common IGP in the Internet. RIP determines a route based on the smallest hop count between source and destination. It is a distance vector protocol that broadcasts routing information to neighboring routers. It is known to use excessive bandwidth. See also hop count and IGP.
Routing Information Protocol. A protocol of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) for exchanging routing information about Internet Protocol (IP) networks and subnets.
Routing Information Protocol. A protocol used to exchange information between routers.
Routing Information Protocol; a routing protocol within subdomains, easily implemented but not able to make efficient use of connections.
Routing Information Protocol. Enables a router to exchange routing information with a neighboring router. RIP is used in small and medium-sized networks. There is a version of RIP for IP and IPX networks. RIP version 2 (RIPv2) is a newer and more efficient form of RIP for IP networks.
Routing Interchange Protocol: One protocol which may be used on internets simply to pass routing information between gateways. It is used on many LANs and on some of the NSFnet regional networks.
The Routing Information Protocol (RIP) is one of the most commonly used Interior Gateway Protocols on internal networks (and to a lesser extent, the internet), which helps routers dynamically adapt to changes of network connections by communicating information about which networks each router can reach and how far away those networks are.
uses hop counts as a routing metric.
Routing Information Protocol. Internal routing protocol in an autonomous system.
Routing Information Protocol. IGP supplied with UNIX BSD systems. The most common IGP in the Internet. RIP uses hop count as a routing metric. See also Enhanced IGRP, hop count, IGP, IGRP, and OSPF.
Routing Information Protocol. A distance-vector IGP used between routers to exchange routing information.
A routing protocol used on TCP/IP networks that distributes the addresses of reachable networks and metrics reflecting the degree of difficulty involved in reaching particular networks form particular locations.
Routing Information Protocol. A variant of the XeroxNS Routing Information Protocol, used to maintain current kernel routing table entries.
Routing Information Protocol. A TCP/IP link-state protocol that supports the exchange of information between hosts and gateways. Broadcasts a message used to find the optimum route to a destination based on a hop count. Compare with SPF and OSPF.
Routing Information Protocol used by Berkeley UNIX systems to exchange routing information among a set of computers attached to a network. RIP packets are sent and received by a program called routed.
Routing Information Protocol. A distance vector, as opposed to link state, routing protocol. Itis an Internet standard IGP defined in STD 34, RFC 1058 (updatedby RFC 1388). See also: Interior Gateway Protocol, Open ShortestPath First.... RPC
Routing Information Protocol. Used in IPv4 networks, a distance-vector interior gateway protocol that makes routing decisions based on hop count.
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