Routing protocol/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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==Articles related by keyphrases (Bot populated)== | |||
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Latest revision as of 16:00, 13 October 2024
- See also changes related to Routing protocol, or pages that link to Routing protocol or to this page or whose text contains "Routing protocol".
Parent topics
Subtopics
Bot-suggested topics
Auto-populated based on Special:WhatLinksHere/Routing protocol. Needs checking by a human.
- BGP connection establishment [r]: used to establish a TCP connection and a BGP session between two routers before they can exchange exterior routing information. [e]
- Computer networking reference models [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Control plane [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Default route [r]: The exit of last resort onto which a router can forward packets whose destination does not match any prefix in the local routing table [e]
- Default-free zone [r]: Routers in the default-free zone (DFZ) have no default routes in their routing table; they obtain all their routing information from local configuration and routing protocols, especially the Border Gateway Protocol [e]
- Intermediate System-Intermediate System [r]: One of two nonproprietary and highly scalable Internet interior routing protocols, the other being Open Shortest Path First. [e]
- Internet Protocol [r]: Highly resilient protocol for messages sent across the internet, first by being broken into smaller packets (each with the endpoint address attached), then moving among many mid-points by unpredictable routes, and finally being reassembled into the original message at the endpoint. IP version 4 (IPv4) is from 1980 but lacked enough addresses for the entire world and was superseded by IP version 6 (IPv6) in 1998. [e]
- Internet transit provider [r]: A Internet Service Provider that is connected to the default-free zone (DFZ), and, for a payment, will connect customers to the DFZ. [e]
- Internet [r]: International "network of networks" that connects computers together through the Internet Protocol Suite and supports applications like Email and the World Wide Web. [e]
- Open Shortest Path First for IPv6 [r]: A major revision of the Open Shortest Path First interior routing protocol, principally to let it carry both Internet Protocol version 4 and Internet Protocol version 6 information, but also to integrate various incremental enhancements to OSPF [e]
- Open Shortest Path First [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Routing table [r]: An electronic table (file) or database type object that is stored in a router or a networked computer. [e]
- Routing policy [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Routing [r]: The process of receiving a packet on one interface of a router, validating the packet and forwarding it out the appropriate interface. [e]
- Virtual private network [r]: The emulation of a private Wide Area Network (WAN) facility using IP facilities, including the public Internet or private IP backbones. [e]
- National Institute of Aerospace [r]: A non-profit research and graduate education institute headquartered in Hampton, Virginia, near NASA's Langley Research Center. [e]
- Physics [r]: The study of forces and energies in space and time. [e]
- Request for Comments [r]: A Request for Comments (RFC) is one of a series of documents about the Internet, mostly technical, but some about policy issues; some become de facto Internet standards, which set the engineering specifications for the internals of the Internet, while many others languish largely or completely ignored. [e]
- Internetworking [r]: is identifying the applications that provide an interface between Internet users and communications services, those services themselves, public and private instances of application and communications services and the aggregation of private and public networks into a global communications and application resource. [e]
- Computer networking reference models [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Unicasting [r]: In computer networks, the transmission of a frame, packet, or message, which has a destination address that maps to one and only one target [e]