We ran into a problem yesterday that caused a large problem, and I'm now quite 
sure that it was assessed properly, as our network engineer blamed it on RIP 
not working properly and made the decision to implement BGP for routing at this 
site.  Everywhere else, we're using RIP.

Essentially, we had to move from one tower to another on the same mountaintop.  
So we bought all new equipment and finished its installation yesterday.  9 APs 
and 2 backhauls.

Using Mikrotik ethernet routers...

Now, I'm now sure of the specifics of the problem, and I'm not really 
interested in asking you all to troubleshoot the problem that we had yesterday.

My question is this...

Is RIP solid?  It's been around for decades, and I used it extensively in the 
beginning years when I was doing everything.  But it seems that we have many 
problems lately and RIP is being blamed for it.  It's a very easy protocol to 
administer & configure, not too complicated, so I can't imagine so many 
problems when things are properly configured.

I know there are better protocols to use on wireless networks these days, and 
that there are protocols to use that allow failover to redundant backhauls, 
etc.  That is not my question.

When properly configured...Is RIP solid?  We have about 900 customers and about 
20 tower sites.

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