Dear Friends,
This may be a silly question but I never found a clear answer form a book or
a standard.
A router is running BGP4, OSPF and RIP at the same time. How many routing
tables(or forwarding tables) this router has? I think there should be only
one table produced by all the protocols and
I think it may actually have 5 one for each protocal Plus the Static. BTW
whats the CPU time on that thing like?
-jeremyy
On Thu, 23 Mar 2000, David Wang wrote:
> Dear Friends,
>
> This may be a silly question but I never found a clear answer form a book or
> a standard.
>
> A router is run
David,
The router has only one routing table which use to propagate the best
route to another routers base on adminstrative distance when you are
running several routing protocols for the same networks.
Regards.
Hugo
On Thu, 23 Mar 2000, David Wang wrote:
> Dear Friends,
>
> This may be a s
We use one routing table, but multiple forwarding tables, depending on TOS.
Bob
At 11:37 AM 3/23/2000 -0600, David Wang wrote:
>Dear Friends,
>
>This may be a silly question but I never found a clear answer form a book or
>a standard.
>
>A router is running BGP4, OSPF and RIP at the
Hy David - It depends!
If you're redistributing RIP into OSPF, and into BGP, fine.
If not, I don't see what you're doing. You'll have one for every protocol.
Assuming it is a Cisco router, the router will have a BGP table (build on
BGP messages), a OSPF table with the redistributed RIP routes and
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