Difference between revisions of "RFC1058"

From RFC-Wiki
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Network Working Group                                        C. Hedrick
 
Network Working Group                                        C. Hedrick
 
Request for Comments: 1058                            Rutgers University
 
Request for Comments: 1058                            Rutgers University
                                                              June 1988
+
                                                            June 1988
 
 
 
 
                      Routing Information Protocol
 
  
 +
                  Routing Information Protocol
  
Status of this Memo
+
'''Status of this Memo'''
  
  This RFC describes an existing protocol for exchanging routing
+
This RFC describes an existing protocol for exchanging routing
  information among gateways and other hosts.  It is intended to be
+
information among gateways and other hosts.  It is intended to be
  used as a basis for developing gateway software for use in the
+
used as a basis for developing gateway software for use in the
  Internet community.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
+
Internet community.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
  
                            Table of Contents
+
                          Table of Contents
  
  1. Introduction                                                    2
+
1. Introduction                                                    2
        1.1. Limitations of the protocol                              4
+
    1.1. Limitations of the protocol                              4
        1.2. Organization of this document                            4
+
    1.2. Organization of this document                            4
  2. Distance Vector Algorithms                                      5
+
2. Distance Vector Algorithms                                      5
        2.1. Dealing with changes in topology                        11
+
    2.1. Dealing with changes in topology                        11
        2.2. Preventing instability                                  12
+
    2.2. Preventing instability                                  12
            2.2.1. Split horizon                                    14
+
          2.2.1. Split horizon                                    14
            2.2.2. Triggered updates                                15
+
          2.2.2. Triggered updates                                15
  3. Specifications for the protocol                                16
+
3. Specifications for the protocol                                16
        3.1. Message formats                                          18
+
    3.1. Message formats                                          18
        3.2. Addressing considerations                                20
+
    3.2. Addressing considerations                                20
        3.3. Timers                                                  23
+
    3.3. Timers                                                  23
        3.4. Input processing                                        24
+
    3.4. Input processing                                        24
            3.4.1. Request                                          25
+
          3.4.1. Request                                          25
            3.4.2. Response                                          26
+
          3.4.2. Response                                          26
        3.5. Output Processing                                        28
+
    3.5. Output Processing                                        28
        3.6. Compatibility                                            31
+
    3.6. Compatibility                                            31
  4. Control functions                                              31
+
4. Control functions                                              31
  
 
Overview
 
Overview
  
  This memo is intended to do the following things:
+
This memo is intended to do the following things:
 
 
      - Document a protocol and algorithms that are currently in
 
        wide use for routing, but which have never been formally
 
        documented.
 
 
 
      - Specify some improvements in the algorithms which will
 
        improve stability of the routes in large networks.  These
 
        improvements do not introduce any incompatibility with
 
        existing implementations.  They are to be incorporated into
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Hedrick                                                        [Page 1]
 
 
 
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
 
 
 
 
 
        all implementations of this protocol.
 
 
 
      - Suggest some optional features to allow greater
 
        configurability and control.  These features were developed
 
        specifically to solve problems that have shown up in actual
 
        use by the NSFnet community.  However, they should have more
 
        general utility.
 
 
 
  The Routing Information Protocol (RIP) described here is loosely
 
  based on the program "routed", distributed with the 4.3 Berkeley
 
  Software Distribution.  However, there are several other
 
  implementations of what is supposed to be the same protocol.
 
  Unfortunately, these various implementations disagree in various
 
  details.  The specifications here represent a combination of features
 
  taken from various implementations.  We believe that a program
 
  designed according to this document will interoperate with routed,
 
  and with all other implementations of RIP of which we are aware.
 
 
 
  Note that this description adopts a different view than most existing
 
  implementations about when metrics should be incremented.  By making
 
  a corresponding change in the metric used for a local network, we
 
  have retained compatibility with other existing implementations.  See
 
  section 3.6 for details on this issue.
 
 
 
1. Introduction
 
 
 
  This memo describes one protocol in a series of routing protocols
 
  based on the Bellman-Ford (or distance vector) algorithm.  This
 
  algorithm has been used for routing computations in computer networks
 
  since the early days of the ARPANET.  The particular packet formats
 
  and protocol described here are based on the program "routed", which
 
  is included with the Berkeley distribution of Unix.  It has become a
 
  de facto standard for exchange of routing information among gateways
 
  and hosts.  It is implemented for this purpose by most commercial
 
  vendors of IP gateways.  Note, however, that many of these vendors
 
  have their own protocols which are used among their own gateways.
 
 
 
  This protocol is most useful as an "interior gateway protocol".  In a
 
  nationwide network such as the current Internet, it is very unlikely
 
  that a single routing protocol will used for the whole network.
 
  Rather, the network will be organized as a collection of "autonomous
 
  systems".  An autonomous system will in general be administered by a
 
  single entity, or at least will have some reasonable degree of
 
  technical and administrative control.  Each autonomous system will
 
  have its own routing technology.  This may well be different for
 
  different autonomous systems.  The routing protocol used within an
 
  autonomous system is referred to as an interior gateway protocol, or
 
  "IGP".  A separate protocol is used to interface among the autonomous
 
 
 
 
 
  
Hedrick                                                        [Page 2]
+
  - Document a protocol and algorithms that are currently in
 +
    wide use for routing, but which have never been formally
 +
    documented.
  
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
+
  - Specify some improvements in the algorithms which will
 +
    improve stability of the routes in large networks.  These
 +
    improvements do not introduce any incompatibility with
 +
    existing implementations.  They are to be incorporated into
  
 +
    all implementations of this protocol.
  
   systems.  The earliest such protocol, still used in the Internet, is
+
   - Suggest some optional features to allow greater
  "EGP" (exterior gateway protocol).  Such protocols are now usually
+
    configurability and controlThese features were developed
  referred to as inter-AS routing protocols.  RIP was designed to work
+
    specifically to solve problems that have shown up in actual
  with moderate-size networks using reasonably homogeneous technology.
+
    use by the NSFnet communityHowever, they should have more
  Thus it is suitable as an IGP for many campuses and for regional
+
    general utility.
  networks using serial lines whose speeds do not vary widelyIt is
 
  not intended for use in more complex environmentsFor more
 
  information on the context into which RIP is expected to fit, see
 
  Braden and Postel [3].
 
  
  RIP is one of a class of algorithms known as "distance vector
+
The Routing Information Protocol (RIP) described here is loosely
  algorithms".  The earliest description of this class of algorithms
+
based on the program "routed", distributed with the 4.3 Berkeley
  known to the author is in Ford and Fulkerson [6].  Because of this,
+
Software DistributionHowever, there are several other
  they are sometimes known as Ford-Fulkerson algorithms.  The term
+
implementations of what is supposed to be the same protocol.
  Bellman-Ford is also used.  It comes from the fact that the
+
Unfortunately, these various implementations disagree in various
  formulation is based on Bellman's equation, the basis of "dynamic
+
detailsThe specifications here represent a combination of features
  programming".  (For a standard introduction to this area, see [1].)
+
taken from various implementationsWe believe that a program
  The presentation in this document is closely based on [2]This text
+
designed according to this document will interoperate with routed,
  contains an introduction to the mathematics of routing algorithms.
+
and with all other implementations of RIP of which we are aware.
  It describes and justifies several variants of the algorithm
 
  presented here, as well as a number of other related algorithms.  The
 
  basic algorithms described in this protocol were used in computer
 
  routing as early as 1969 in the ARPANETHowever, the specific
 
  ancestry of this protocol is within the Xerox network protocolsThe
 
  PUP protocols (see [4]) used the Gateway Information Protocol to
 
  exchange routing information.  A somewhat updated version of this
 
  protocol was adopted for the Xerox Network Systems (XNS)
 
  architecture, with the name Routing Information Protocol.  (See [7].)
 
  Berkeley's routed is largely the same as the Routing Information
 
  Protocol, with XNS addresses replaced by a more general address
 
  format capable of handling IP and other types of address, and with
 
  routing updates limited to one every 30 seconds.  Because of this
 
  similarity, the term Routing Information Protocol (or just RIP) is
 
  used to refer to both the XNS protocol and the protocol used by
 
  routed.
 
  
  RIP is intended for use within the IP-based Internet.  The Internet
+
Note that this description adopts a different view than most existing
  is organized into a number of networks connected by gateways.  The
+
implementations about when metrics should be incrementedBy making
  networks may be either point-to-point links or more complex networks
+
a corresponding change in the metric used for a local network, we
  such as Ethernet or the ARPANETHosts and gateways are presented
+
have retained compatibility with other existing implementationsSee
  with IP datagrams addressed to some host.  Routing is the method by
+
section 3.6 for details on this issue.
  which the host or gateway decides where to send the datagram.  It may
 
  be able to send the datagram directly to the destination, if that
 
  destination is on one of the networks that are directly connected to
 
  the host or gatewayHowever, the interesting case is when the
 
  destination is not directly reachable. In this case, the host or
 
  gateway attempts to send the datagram to a gateway that is nearer the
 
  destination. The goal of a routing protocol is very simple: It is to
 
  
 +
== Introduction ==
  
 +
This memo describes one protocol in a series of routing protocols
 +
based on the Bellman-Ford (or distance vector) algorithm.  This
 +
algorithm has been used for routing computations in computer networks
 +
since the early days of the ARPANET.  The particular packet formats
 +
and protocol described here are based on the program "routed", which
 +
is included with the Berkeley distribution of Unix.  It has become a
 +
de facto standard for exchange of routing information among gateways
 +
and hosts.  It is implemented for this purpose by most commercial
 +
vendors of IP gateways.  Note, however, that many of these vendors
 +
have their own protocols which are used among their own gateways.
  
Hedrick                                                        [Page 3]
+
This protocol is most useful as an "interior gateway protocol".  In a
 +
nationwide network such as the current Internet, it is very unlikely
 +
that a single routing protocol will used for the whole network.
 +
Rather, the network will be organized as a collection of "autonomous
 +
systems".  An autonomous system will in general be administered by a
 +
single entity, or at least will have some reasonable degree of
 +
technical and administrative control.  Each autonomous system will
 +
have its own routing technology.  This may well be different for
 +
different autonomous systems.  The routing protocol used within an
 +
autonomous system is referred to as an interior gateway protocol, or
 +
"IGP".  A separate protocol is used to interface among the autonomous
  
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
+
systems.  The earliest such protocol, still used in the Internet, is
 +
"EGP" (exterior gateway protocol).  Such protocols are now usually
 +
referred to as inter-AS routing protocols.  RIP was designed to work
 +
with moderate-size networks using reasonably homogeneous technology.
 +
Thus it is suitable as an IGP for many campuses and for regional
 +
networks using serial lines whose speeds do not vary widely.  It is
 +
not intended for use in more complex environments.  For more
 +
information on the context into which RIP is expected to fit, see
 +
Braden and Postel [3].
  
 +
RIP is one of a class of algorithms known as "distance vector
 +
algorithms".  The earliest description of this class of algorithms
 +
known to the author is in Ford and Fulkerson [6].  Because of this,
 +
they are sometimes known as Ford-Fulkerson algorithms.  The term
 +
Bellman-Ford is also used.  It comes from the fact that the
 +
formulation is based on Bellman's equation, the basis of "dynamic
 +
programming".  (For a standard introduction to this area, see [1].)
 +
The presentation in this document is closely based on [2].  This text
 +
contains an introduction to the mathematics of routing algorithms.
 +
It describes and justifies several variants of the algorithm
 +
presented here, as well as a number of other related algorithms.  The
 +
basic algorithms described in this protocol were used in computer
 +
routing as early as 1969 in the ARPANET.  However, the specific
 +
ancestry of this protocol is within the Xerox network protocols.  The
 +
PUP protocols (see [4]) used the Gateway Information Protocol to
 +
exchange routing information.  A somewhat updated version of this
 +
protocol was adopted for the Xerox Network Systems (XNS)
 +
architecture, with the name Routing Information Protocol.  (See [7].)
 +
Berkeley's routed is largely the same as the Routing Information
 +
Protocol, with XNS addresses replaced by a more general address
 +
format capable of handling IP and other types of address, and with
 +
routing updates limited to one every 30 seconds.  Because of this
 +
similarity, the term Routing Information Protocol (or just RIP) is
 +
used to refer to both the XNS protocol and the protocol used by
 +
routed.
  
  supply the information that is needed to do routing.
+
RIP is intended for use within the IP-based Internet.  The Internet
 +
is organized into a number of networks connected by gateways.  The
 +
networks may be either point-to-point links or more complex networks
 +
such as Ethernet or the ARPANET.  Hosts and gateways are presented
 +
with IP datagrams addressed to some host.  Routing is the method by
 +
which the host or gateway decides where to send the datagram.  It may
 +
be able to send the datagram directly to the destination, if that
 +
destination is on one of the networks that are directly connected to
 +
the host or gateway.  However, the interesting case is when the
 +
destination is not directly reachable.  In this case, the host or
 +
gateway attempts to send the datagram to a gateway that is nearer the
 +
destination.  The goal of a routing protocol is very simple: It is to
  
1.1. Limitations of the protocol
+
supply the information that is needed to do routing.
  
  This protocol does not solve every possible routing problem.  As
+
=== Limitations of the protocol ===
  mentioned above, it is primary intended for use as an IGP, in
 
  reasonably homogeneous networks of moderate size.  In addition, the
 
  following specific limitations should be mentioned:
 
  
      - The protocol is limited to networks whose longest path
+
This protocol does not solve every possible routing problemAs
        involves 15 hopsThe designers believe that the basic
+
mentioned above, it is primary intended for use as an IGP, in
        protocol design is inappropriate for larger networks.  Note
+
reasonably homogeneous networks of moderate sizeIn addition, the
        that this statement of the limit assumes that a cost of 1
+
following specific limitations should be mentioned:
        is used for each network.  This is the way RIP is normally
 
        configuredIf the system administrator chooses to use
 
        larger costs, the upper bound of 15 can easily become a
 
        problem.
 
  
      - The protocol depends upon "counting to infinity" to resolve
+
  - The protocol is limited to networks whose longest path
        certain unusual situations(This will be explained in the
+
    involves 15 hopsThe designers believe that the basic
        next section.) If the system of networks has several
+
    protocol design is inappropriate for larger networksNote
        hundred networks, and a routing loop was formed involving
+
    that this statement of the limit assumes that a cost of 1
        all of them, the resolution of the loop would require
+
    is used for each network.  This is the way RIP is normally
        either much time (if the frequency of routing updates were
+
    configuredIf the system administrator chooses to use
        limited) or bandwidth (if updates were sent whenever
+
    larger costs, the upper bound of 15 can easily become a
        changes were detected)Such a loop would consume a large
+
    problem.
        amount of network bandwidth before the loop was corrected.
 
        We believe that in realistic cases, this will not be a
 
        problem except on slow lines.  Even then, the problem will
 
        be fairly unusual, since various precautions are taken that
 
        should prevent these problems in most cases.
 
  
      - This protocol uses fixed "metrics" to compare alternative
+
  - The protocol depends upon "counting to infinity" to resolve
        routesIt is not appropriate for situations where routes
+
    certain unusual situations(This will be explained in the
        need to be chosen based on real-time parameters such a
+
    next section.)  If the system of networks has several
        measured delay, reliability, or loadThe obvious
+
    hundred networks, and a routing loop was formed involving
        extensions to allow metrics of this type are likely to
+
    all of them, the resolution of the loop would require
        introduce instabilities of a sort that the protocol is not
+
    either much time (if the frequency of routing updates were
        designed to handle.
+
    limited) or bandwidth (if updates were sent whenever
 +
    changes were detected)Such a loop would consume a large
 +
    amount of network bandwidth before the loop was corrected.
 +
    We believe that in realistic cases, this will not be a
 +
    problem except on slow lines.  Even then, the problem will
 +
    be fairly unusual, since various precautions are taken that
 +
    should prevent these problems in most cases.
  
1.2. Organization of this document
+
  - This protocol uses fixed "metrics" to compare alternative
 +
    routes. It is not appropriate for situations where routes
 +
    need to be chosen based on real-time parameters such a
 +
    measured delay, reliability, or load. The obvious
 +
    extensions to allow metrics of this type are likely to
 +
    introduce instabilities of a sort that the protocol is not
 +
    designed to handle.
  
  The main body of this document is organized into two parts, which
+
=== Organization of this document ===
  occupy the next two sections:
 
  
      2  A conceptual development and justification of distance vector
+
The main body of this document is organized into two parts, which
          algorithms in general.
+
occupy the next two sections:
  
 +
  2  A conceptual development and justification of distance vector
 +
      algorithms in general.
  
 +
  3  The actual protocol description.
  
 +
Each of these two sections can largely stand on its own.  Section 2
 +
attempts to give an informal presentation of the mathematical
 +
underpinnings of the algorithm.  Note that the presentation follows a
 +
"spiral" method.  An initial, fairly simple algorithm is described.
 +
Then refinements are added to it in successive sections.  Section 3
 +
is the actual protocol description.  Except where specific references
 +
are made to section 2, it should be possible to implement RIP
 +
entirely from the specifications given in section 3.
  
Hedrick                                                        [Page 4]
+
== Distance Vector Algorithms ==
  
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
+
Routing is the task of finding a path from a sender to a desired
 +
destination.  In the IP "Catenet model" this reduces primarily to a
 +
matter of finding gateways between networks.  As long as a message
 +
remains on a single network or subnet, any routing problems are
 +
solved by technology that is specific to the network.  For example,
 +
the Ethernet and the ARPANET each define a way in which any sender
 +
can talk to any specified destination within that one network.  IP
 +
routing comes in primarily when messages must go from a sender on one
 +
such network to a destination on a different one.  In that case, the
 +
message must pass through gateways connecting the networks.  If the
 +
networks are not adjacent, the message may pass through several
 +
intervening networks, and the gateways connecting them.  Once the
 +
message gets to a gateway that is on the same network as the
 +
destination, that network's own technology is used to get to the
 +
destination.
  
 +
Throughout this section, the term "network" is used generically to
 +
cover a single broadcast network (e.g., an Ethernet), a point to
 +
point line, or the ARPANET.  The critical point is that a network is
 +
treated as a single entity by IP.  Either no routing is necessary (as
 +
with a point to point line), or that routing is done in a manner that
 +
is transparent to IP, allowing IP to treat the entire network as a
 +
single fully-connected system (as with an Ethernet or the ARPANET).
 +
Note that the term "network" is used in a somewhat different way in
 +
discussions of IP addressing.  A single IP network number may be
 +
assigned to a collection of networks, with "subnet" addressing being
 +
used to describe the individual networks.  In effect, we are using
 +
the term "network" here to refer to subnets in cases where subnet
 +
addressing is in use.
  
      3  The actual protocol description.
+
A number of different approaches for finding routes between networks
 +
are possible. One useful way of categorizing these approaches is on
 +
the basis of the type of information the gateways need to exchange in
 +
order to be able to find routes.  Distance vector algorithms are
 +
based on the exchange of only a small amount of information.  Each
  
  Each of these two sections can largely stand on its own.  Section 2
+
entity (gateway or host) that participates in the routing protocol is
  attempts to give an informal presentation of the mathematical
+
assumed to keep information about all of the destinations within the
  underpinnings of the algorithmNote that the presentation follows a
+
systemGenerally, information about all entities connected to one
  "spiral" methodAn initial, fairly simple algorithm is described.
+
network is summarized by a single entry, which describes the route to
  Then refinements are added to it in successive sectionsSection 3
+
all destinations on that networkThis summarization is possible
  is the actual protocol descriptionExcept where specific references
+
because as far as IP is concerned, routing within a network is
  are made to section 2, it should be possible to implement RIP
+
invisible. Each entry in this routing database includes the next
  entirely from the specifications given in section 3.
+
gateway to which datagrams destined for the entity should be sent.
 +
In addition, it includes a "metric" measuring the total distance to
 +
the entityDistance is a somewhat generalized concept, which may
 +
cover the time delay in getting messages to the entity, the dollar
 +
cost of sending messages to it, etcDistance vector algorithms get
 +
their name from the fact that it is possible to compute optimal
 +
routes when the only information exchanged is the list of these
 +
distances.  Furthermore, information is only exchanged among entities
 +
that are adjacent, that is, entities that share a common network.
  
2. Distance Vector Algorithms
+
Although routing is most commonly based on information about
 +
networks, it is sometimes necessary to keep track of the routes to
 +
individual hosts.  The RIP protocol makes no formal distinction
 +
between networks and hosts.  It simply describes exchange of
 +
information about destinations, which may be either networks or
 +
hosts.  (Note however, that it is possible for an implementor to
 +
choose not to support host routes.  See section 3.2.)  In fact, the
 +
mathematical developments are most conveniently thought of in terms
 +
of routes from one host or gateway to another.  When discussing the
 +
algorithm in abstract terms, it is best to think of a routing entry
 +
for a network as an abbreviation for routing entries for all of the
 +
entities connected to that network.  This sort of abbreviation makes
 +
sense only because we think of networks as having no internal
 +
structure that is visible at the IP level.  Thus, we will generally
 +
assign the same distance to every entity in a given network.
  
  Routing is the task of finding a path from a sender to a desired
+
We said above that each entity keeps a routing database with one
  destination.  In the IP "Catenet model" this reduces primarily to a
+
entry for every possible destination in the systemAn actual
  matter of finding gateways between networks.  As long as a message
+
implementation is likely to need to keep the following information
  remains on a single network or subnet, any routing problems are
+
about each destination:
  solved by technology that is specific to the network.  For example,
 
  the Ethernet and the ARPANET each define a way in which any sender
 
  can talk to any specified destination within that one network.  IP
 
  routing comes in primarily when messages must go from a sender on one
 
  such network to a destination on a different one.  In that case, the
 
  message must pass through gateways connecting the networks.  If the
 
  networks are not adjacent, the message may pass through several
 
  intervening networks, and the gateways connecting themOnce the
 
  message gets to a gateway that is on the same network as the
 
  destination, that network's own technology is used to get to the
 
  destination.
 
  
   Throughout this section, the term "network" is used generically to
+
   - address: in IP implementations of these algorithms, this
  cover a single broadcast network (e.g., an Ethernet), a point to
+
    will be the IP address of the host or network.
  point line, or the ARPANET.  The critical point is that a network is
 
  treated as a single entity by IP.  Either no routing is necessary (as
 
  with a point to point line), or that routing is done in a manner that
 
  is transparent to IP, allowing IP to treat the entire network as a
 
  single fully-connected system (as with an Ethernet or the ARPANET).
 
  Note that the term "network" is used in a somewhat different way in
 
  discussions of IP addressing.  A single IP network number may be
 
  assigned to a collection of networks, with "subnet" addressing being
 
  used to describe the individual networks.  In effect, we are using
 
  the term "network" here to refer to subnets in cases where subnet
 
  addressing is in use.
 
  
   A number of different approaches for finding routes between networks
+
   - gateway: the first gateway along the route to the
  are possible.  One useful way of categorizing these approaches is on
+
    destination.
  the basis of the type of information the gateways need to exchange in
 
  order to be able to find routes.  Distance vector algorithms are
 
  based on the exchange of only a small amount of information. Each
 
  
 +
  - interface: the physical network which must be used to reach
 +
    the first gateway.
  
 +
  - metric: a number, indicating the distance to the
  
Hedrick                                                        [Page 5]
+
    destination.
  
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
+
  - timer: the amount of time since the entry was last updated.
  
 +
In addition, various flags and other internal information will
 +
probably be included.  This database is initialized with a
 +
description of the entities that are directly connected to the
 +
system.  It is updated according to information received in messages
 +
from neighboring gateways.
  
  entity (gateway or host) that participates in the routing protocol is
+
The most important information exchanged by the hosts and gateways is
  assumed to keep information about all of the destinations within the
+
that carried in update messages.  Each entity that participates in
  system.  Generally, information about all entities connected to one
+
the routing scheme sends update messages that describe the routing
  network is summarized by a single entry, which describes the route to
+
database as it currently exists in that entity.  It is possible to
  all destinations on that network.  This summarization is possible
+
maintain optimal routes for the entire system by using only
  because as far as IP is concerned, routing within a network is
+
information obtained from neighboring entitiesThe algorithm used
  invisible.  Each entry in this routing database includes the next
+
for that will be described in the next section.
  gateway to which datagrams destined for the entity should be sent.
 
  In addition, it includes a "metric" measuring the total distance to
 
  the entity.  Distance is a somewhat generalized concept, which may
 
  cover the time delay in getting messages to the entity, the dollar
 
  cost of sending messages to it, etcDistance vector algorithms get
 
  their name from the fact that it is possible to compute optimal
 
  routes when the only information exchanged is the list of these
 
  distancesFurthermore, information is only exchanged among entities
 
  that are adjacent, that is, entities that share a common network.
 
  
  Although routing is most commonly based on information about
+
As we mentioned above, the purpose of routing is to find a way to get
  networks, it is sometimes necessary to keep track of the routes to
+
datagrams to their ultimate destinationsDistance vector algorithms
  individual hosts.  The RIP protocol makes no formal distinction
+
are based on a table giving the best route to every destination in
  between networks and hosts.  It simply describes exchange of
+
the systemOf course, in order to define which route is best, we
  information about destinations, which may be either networks or
+
have to have some way of measuring goodness.  This is referred to as
  hosts.  (Note however, that it is possible for an implementor to
+
the "metric".
  choose not to support host routes.  See section 3.2.) In fact, the
 
  mathematical developments are most conveniently thought of in terms
 
  of routes from one host or gateway to anotherWhen discussing the
 
  algorithm in abstract terms, it is best to think of a routing entry
 
  for a network as an abbreviation for routing entries for all of the
 
  entities connected to that network.  This sort of abbreviation makes
 
  sense only because we think of networks as having no internal
 
  structure that is visible at the IP level.  Thus, we will generally
 
  assign the same distance to every entity in a given network.
 
  
  We said above that each entity keeps a routing database with one
+
In simple networks, it is common to use a metric that simply counts
  entry for every possible destination in the systemAn actual
+
how many gateways a message must go through.  In more complex
  implementation is likely to need to keep the following information
+
networks, a metric is chosen to represent the total amount of delay
  about each destination:
+
that the message suffers, the cost of sending it, or some other
 +
quantity which may be minimizedThe main requirement is that it
 +
must be possible to represent the metric as a sum of "costs" for
 +
individual hops.
  
      - address: in IP implementations of these algorithms, this
+
Formally, if it is possible to get from entity i to entity j directly
        will be the IP address of the host or network.
+
(i.e., without passing through another gateway between), then a cost,
 +
d(i,j), is associated with the hop between i and j.  In the normal
 +
case where all entities on a given network are considered to be the
 +
same, d(i,j) is the same for all destinations on a given network, and
 +
represents the cost of using that network.  To get the metric of a
 +
complete route, one just adds up the costs of the individual hops
 +
that make up the route.  For the purposes of this memo, we assume
 +
that the costs are positive integers.
  
      - gateway: the first gateway along the route to the
+
Let D(i,j) represent the metric of the best route from entity i to
        destination.
+
entity j.  It should be defined for every pair of entities.  d(i,j)
 +
represents the costs of the individual steps.  Formally, let d(i,j)
 +
represent the cost of going directly from entity i to entity j.  It
 +
is infinite if i and j are not immediate neighbors. (Note that d(i,i)
  
      - interface: the physical network which must be used to reach
+
is infinite.  That is, we don't consider there to be a direct
        the first gateway.
+
connection from a node to itself.)  Since costs are additive, it is
 +
easy to show that the best metric must be described by
  
      - metric: a number, indicating the distance to the
+
          D(i,i) = 0,                      all i
 +
          D(i,j) = min [d(i,k) + D(k,j)],  otherwise
 +
                    k
  
 +
and that the best routes start by going from i to those neighbors k
 +
for which d(i,k) + D(k,j) has the minimum value.  (These things can
 +
be shown by induction on the number of steps in the routes.)  Note
 +
that we can limit the second equation to k's that are immediate
 +
neighbors of i.  For the others, d(i,k) is infinite, so the term
 +
involving them can never be the minimum.
  
 +
It turns out that one can compute the metric by a simple algorithm
 +
based on this.  Entity i gets its neighbors k to send it their
 +
estimates of their distances to the destination j.  When i gets the
 +
estimates from k, it adds d(i,k) to each of the numbers.  This is
 +
simply the cost of traversing the network between i and k.  Now and
 +
then i compares the values from all of its neighbors and picks the
 +
smallest.
  
Hedrick                                                        [Page 6]
+
A proof is given in [2] that this algorithm will converge to the
 +
correct estimates of D(i,j) in finite time in the absence of topology
 +
changes.  The authors make very few assumptions about the order in
 +
which the entities send each other their information, or when the min
 +
is recomputed.  Basically, entities just can't stop sending updates
 +
or recomputing metrics, and the networks can't delay messages
 +
forever.  (Crash of a routing entity is a topology change.)  Also,
 +
their proof does not make any assumptions about the initial estimates
 +
of D(i,j), except that they must be non-negative.  The fact that
 +
these fairly weak assumptions are good enough is important.  Because
 +
we don't have to make assumptions about when updates are sent, it is
 +
safe to run the algorithm asynchronously.  That is, each entity can
 +
send updates according to its own clock.  Updates can be dropped by
 +
the network, as long as they don't all get dropped.  Because we don't
 +
have to make assumptions about the starting condition, the algorithm
 +
can handle changes.  When the system changes, the routing algorithm
 +
starts moving to a new equilibrium, using the old one as its starting
 +
point.  It is important that the algorithm will converge in finite
 +
time no matter what the starting point.  Otherwise certain kinds of
 +
changes might lead to non-convergent behavior.
  
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
+
The statement of the algorithm given above (and the proof) assumes
 +
that each entity keeps copies of the estimates that come from each of
 +
its neighbors, and now and then does a min over all of the neighbors.
 +
In fact real implementations don't necessarily do that.  They simply
  
 +
remember the best metric seen so far, and the identity of the
 +
neighbor that sent it.  They replace this information whenever they
 +
see a better (smaller) metric.  This allows them to compute the
 +
minimum incrementally, without having to store data from all of the
 +
neighbors.
  
        destination.
+
There is one other difference between the algorithm as described in
 +
texts and those used in real protocols such as RIP: the description
 +
above would have each entity include an entry for itself, showing a
 +
distance of zero.  In fact this is not generally done.  Recall that
 +
all entities on a network are normally summarized by a single entry
 +
for the network.  Consider the situation of a host or gateway G that
 +
is connected to network A.  C represents the cost of using network A
 +
(usually a metric of one).  (Recall that we are assuming that the
 +
internal structure of a network is not visible to IP, and thus the
 +
cost of going between any two entities on it is the same.)  In
 +
principle, G should get a message from every other entity H on
 +
network A, showing a cost of 0 to get from that entity to itself.  G
 +
would then compute C + 0 as the distance to H.  Rather than having G
 +
look at all of these identical messages, it simply starts out by
 +
making an entry for network A in its table, and assigning it a metric
 +
of C.  This entry for network A should be thought of as summarizing
 +
the entries for all other entities on network A.  The only entity on
 +
A that can't be summarized by that common entry is G itself, since
 +
the cost of going from G to G is 0, not C.  But since we never need
 +
those 0 entries, we can safely get along with just the single entry
 +
for network A.  Note one other implication of this strategy: because
 +
we don't need to use the 0 entries for anything, hosts that do not
 +
function as gateways don't need to send any update messages.  Clearly
 +
hosts that don't function as gateways (i.e., hosts that are connected
 +
to only one network) can have no useful information to contribute
 +
other than their own entry D(i,i) = 0.  As they have only the one
 +
interface, it is easy to see that a route to any other network
 +
through them will simply go in that interface and then come right
 +
back out it.  Thus the cost of such a route will be greater than the
 +
best cost by at least C.  Since we don't need the 0 entries, non-
 +
gateways need not participate in the routing protocol at all.
  
      - timer: the amount of time since the entry was last updated.
+
Let us summarize what a host or gateway G does.  For each destination
 +
in the system, G will keep a current estimate of the metric for that
 +
destination (i.e., the total cost of getting to it) and the identity
 +
of the neighboring gateway on whose data that metric is based.  If
 +
the destination is on a network that is directly connected to G, then
 +
G simply uses an entry that shows the cost of using the network, and
 +
the fact that no gateway is needed to get to the destination.  It is
 +
easy to show that once the computation has converged to the correct
 +
metrics, the neighbor that is recorded by this technique is in fact
 +
the first gateway on the path to the destination. (If there are
  
  In addition, various flags and other internal information will
+
several equally good paths, it is the first gateway on one of them.)
  probably be included.  This database is initialized with a
+
This combination of destination, metric, and gateway is typically
  description of the entities that are directly connected to the
+
referred to as a route to the destination with that metric, using
  system.  It is updated according to information received in messages
+
that gateway.
  from neighboring gateways.
 
  
  The most important information exchanged by the hosts and gateways is
+
The method so far only has a way to lower the metric, as the existing
  that carried in update messagesEach entity that participates in
+
metric is kept until a smaller one shows up.  It is possible that the
  the routing scheme sends update messages that describe the routing
+
initial estimate might be too low.  Thus, there must be a way to
  database as it currently exists in that entity.  It is possible to
+
increase the metricIt turns out to be sufficient to use the
  maintain optimal routes for the entire system by using only
+
following rule: suppose the current route to a destination has metric
  information obtained from neighboring entitiesThe algorithm used
+
D and uses gateway G.  If a new set of information arrived from some
  for that will be described in the next section.
+
source other than G, only update the route if the new metric is
 +
better than D.  But if a new set of information arrives from G
 +
itself, always update D to the new value.  It is easy to show that
 +
with this rule, the incremental update process produces the same
 +
routes as a calculation that remembers the latest information from
 +
all the neighbors and does an explicit minimum(Note that the
 +
discussion so far assumes that the network configuration is static.
 +
It does not allow for the possibility that a system might fail.)
  
  As we mentioned above, the purpose of routing is to find a way to get
+
To summarize, here is the basic distance vector algorithm as it has
  datagrams to their ultimate destinationsDistance vector algorithms
+
been developed so far.  (Note that this is not a statement of the RIP
  are based on a table giving the best route to every destination in
+
protocol.  There are several refinements still to be added.) The
  the systemOf course, in order to define which route is best, we
+
following procedure is carried out by every entity that participates
  have to have some way of measuring goodnessThis is referred to as
+
in the routing protocolThis must include all of the gateways in
  the "metric".
+
the systemHosts that are not gateways may participate as well.
  
  In simple networks, it is common to use a metric that simply counts
+
    - Keep a table with an entry for every possible destination
  how many gateways a message must go throughIn more complex
+
    in the systemThe entry contains the distance D to the
  networks, a metric is chosen to represent the total amount of delay
+
    destination, and the first gateway G on the route to that
  that the message suffers, the cost of sending it, or some other
+
    networkConceptually, there should be an entry for the
  quantity which may be minimizedThe main requirement is that it
+
    entity itself, with metric 0, but this is not actually
  must be possible to represent the metric as a sum of "costs" for
+
    included.
  individual hops.
 
  
   Formally, if it is possible to get from entity i to entity j directly
+
   - Periodically, send a routing update to every neighborThe
  (i.e., without passing through another gateway between), then a cost,
+
    update is a set of messages that contain all of the
  d(i,j), is associated with the hop between i and jIn the normal
+
    information from the routing tableIt contains an entry
  case where all entities on a given network are considered to be the
+
    for each destination, with the distance shown to that
  same, d(i,j) is the same for all destinations on a given network, and
+
    destination.
  represents the cost of using that network.  To get the metric of a
 
  complete route, one just adds up the costs of the individual hops
 
  that make up the routeFor the purposes of this memo, we assume
 
  that the costs are positive integers.
 
  
   Let D(i,j) represent the metric of the best route from entity i to
+
   - When a routing update arrives from a neighbor G', add the
  entity j.  It should be defined for every pair of entities. d(i,j)
+
    cost associated with the network that is shared with G'.
  represents the costs of the individual stepsFormally, let d(i,j)
+
    (This should be the network over which the update arrived.)
  represent the cost of going directly from entity i to entity jIt
+
    Call the resulting distance D'.  Compare the resulting
  is infinite if i and j are not immediate neighbors. (Note that d(i,i)
+
    distances with the current routing table entriesIf the
 +
    new distance D' for N is smaller than the existing value D,
 +
    adopt the new routeThat is, change the table entry for N
 +
    to have metric D' and gateway G'. If G' is the gateway
  
 +
    from which the existing route came, i.e., G' = G, then use
 +
    the new metric even if it is larger than the old one.
  
 +
=== Dealing with changes in topology ===
  
Hedrick                                                        [Page 7]
+
The discussion above assumes that the topology of the network is
 +
fixed.  In practice, gateways and lines often fail and come back up.
 +
To handle this possibility, we need to modify the algorithm slightly.
 +
The theoretical version of the algorithm involved a minimum over all
 +
immediate neighbors.  If the topology changes, the set of neighbors
 +
changes.  Therefore, the next time the calculation is done, the
 +
change will be reflected.  However, as mentioned above, actual
 +
implementations use an incremental version of the minimization.  Only
 +
the best route to any given destination is remembered.  If the
 +
gateway involved in that route should crash, or the network
 +
connection to it break, the calculation might never reflect the
 +
change.  The algorithm as shown so far depends upon a gateway
 +
notifying its neighbors if its metrics change.  If the gateway
 +
crashes, then it has no way of notifying neighbors of a change.
  
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
+
In order to handle problems of this kind, distance vector protocols
 +
must make some provision for timing out routes.  The details depend
 +
upon the specific protocol.  As an example, in RIP every gateway that
 +
participates in routing sends an update message to all its neighbors
 +
once every 30 seconds.  Suppose the current route for network N uses
 +
gateway G.  If we don't hear from G for 180 seconds, we can assume
 +
that either the gateway has crashed or the network connecting us to
 +
it has become unusable.  Thus, we mark the route as invalid.  When we
 +
hear from another neighbor that has a valid route to N, the valid
 +
route will replace the invalid one.  Note that we wait for 180
 +
seconds before timing out a route even though we expect to hear from
 +
each neighbor every 30 seconds.  Unfortunately, messages are
 +
occasionally lost by networks.  Thus, it is probably not a good idea
 +
to invalidate a route based on a single missed message.
  
 +
As we will see below, it is useful to have a way to notify neighbors
 +
that there currently isn't a valid route to some network.  RIP, along
 +
with several other protocols of this class, does this through a
 +
normal update message, by marking that network as unreachable.  A
 +
specific metric value is chosen to indicate an unreachable
 +
destination; that metric value is larger than the largest valid
 +
metric that we expect to see.  In the existing implementation of RIP,
 +
16 is used.  This value is normally referred to as "infinity", since
 +
it is larger than the largest valid metric.  16 may look like a
 +
surprisingly small number.  It is chosen to be this small for reasons
 +
that we will see shortly.  In most implementations, the same
 +
convention is used internally to flag a route as invalid.
  
  is infinite.  That is, we don't consider there to be a direct
+
=== Preventing instability ===
  connection from a node to itself.)  Since costs are additive, it is
 
  easy to show that the best metric must be described by
 
  
            D(i,i) = 0,                      all i
+
The algorithm as presented up to this point will always allow a host
            D(i,j) = min [d(i,k) + D(k,j)],  otherwise
+
or gateway to calculate a correct routing table.  However, that is
                      k
+
still not quite enough to make it useful in practice.  The proofs
 +
referred to above only show that the routing tables will converge to
 +
the correct values in finite time.  They do not guarantee that this
 +
time will be small enough to be useful, nor do they say what will
 +
happen to the metrics for networks that become inaccessible.
  
  and that the best routes start by going from i to those neighbors k
+
It is easy enough to extend the mathematics to handle routes becoming
  for which d(i,k) + D(k,j) has the minimum value.  (These things can
+
inaccessible.  The convention suggested above will do that.  We
  be shown by induction on the number of steps in the routes.) Note
+
choose a large metric value to represent "infinity".  This value must
  that we can limit the second equation to k's that are immediate
+
be large enough that no real metric would ever get that large.  For
  neighbors of iFor the others, d(i,k) is infinite, so the term
+
the purposes of this example, we will use the value 16.  Suppose a
  involving them can never be the minimum.
+
network becomes inaccessible.  All of the immediately neighboring
 +
gateways time out and set the metric for that network to 16For
 +
purposes of analysis, we can assume that all the neighboring gateways
 +
have gotten a new piece of hardware that connects them directly to
 +
the vanished network, with a cost of 16.  Since that is the only
 +
connection to the vanished network, all the other gateways in the
 +
system will converge to new routes that go through one of those
 +
gatewaysIt is easy to see that once convergence has happened, all
 +
the gateways will have metrics of at least 16 for the vanished
 +
network.  Gateways one hop away from the original neighbors would end
 +
up with metrics of at least 17; gateways two hops away would end up
 +
with at least 18, etcAs these metrics are larger than the maximum
 +
metric value, they are all set to 16.  It is obvious that the system
 +
will now converge to a metric of 16 for the vanished network at all
 +
gateways.
  
  It turns out that one can compute the metric by a simple algorithm
+
Unfortunately, the question of how long convergence will take is not
  based on thisEntity i gets its neighbors k to send it their
+
amenable to quite so simple an answerBefore going any further, it
  estimates of their distances to the destination jWhen i gets the
+
will be useful to look at an example (taken from [2])Note, by the
  estimates from k, it adds d(i,k) to each of the numbersThis is
+
way, that what we are about to show will not happen with a correct
  simply the cost of traversing the network between i and kNow and
+
implementation of RIPWe are trying to show why certain features
  then i compares the values from all of its neighbors and picks the
+
are neededNote that the letters correspond to gateways, and the
  smallest.
+
lines to networks.
  
  A proof is given in [2] that this algorithm will converge to the
+
        A-----B
  correct estimates of D(i,j) in finite time in the absence of topology
+
          \  / \
  changes.  The authors make very few assumptions about the order in
+
          \ / |
  which the entities send each other their information, or when the min
+
            C /   all networks have cost 1, except
  is recomputed.  Basically, entities just can't stop sending updates
+
            | /    for the direct link from C to D, which
  or recomputing metrics, and the networks can't delay messages
+
            |/      has cost 10
  forever.  (Crash of a routing entity is a topology change.)  Also,
+
            D
  their proof does not make any assumptions about the initial estimates
+
            |<=== target network
  of D(i,j), except that they must be non-negative.  The fact that
 
  these fairly weak assumptions are good enough is important.  Because
 
  we don't have to make assumptions about when updates are sent, it is
 
  safe to run the algorithm asynchronously. That is, each entity can
 
  send updates according to its own clock. Updates can be dropped by
 
   the network, as long as they don't all get dropped.  Because we don't
 
  have to make assumptions about the starting condition, the algorithm
 
  can handle changes.  When the system changes, the routing algorithm
 
  starts moving to a new equilibrium, using the old one as its starting
 
  point.  It is important that the algorithm will converge in finite
 
  time no matter what the starting point.  Otherwise certain kinds of
 
  changes might lead to non-convergent behavior.
 
  
  The statement of the algorithm given above (and the proof) assumes
+
Each gateway will have a table showing a route to each network.
  that each entity keeps copies of the estimates that come from each of
 
  its neighbors, and now and then does a min over all of the neighbors.
 
  In fact real implementations don't necessarily do that. They simply
 
  
 +
However, for purposes of this illustration, we show only the routes
 +
from each gateway to the network marked at the bottom of the diagram.
  
 +
        D:  directly connected, metric 1
 +
        B:  route via D, metric 2
 +
        C:  route via B, metric 3
 +
        A:  route via B, metric 3
  
Hedrick                                                        [Page 8]
+
Now suppose that the link from B to D fails.  The routes should now
 +
adjust to use the link from C to D.  Unfortunately, it will take a
 +
while for this to this to happen.  The routing changes start when B
 +
notices that the route to D is no longer usable.  For simplicity, the
 +
chart below assumes that all gateways send updates at the same time.
 +
The chart shows the metric for the target network, as it appears in
 +
the routing table at each gateway.
  
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
+
    time ------>
  
 +
    D: dir, 1  dir, 1  dir, 1  dir, 1  ...  dir, 1  dir, 1
 +
    B: unreach  C,  4  C,  5  C,  6      C,  11  C,  12
 +
    C: B,  3  A,  4  A,  5  A,  6      A,  11  D,  11
 +
    A: B,  3  C,  4  C,  5  C,  6      C,  11  C,  12
  
  remember the best metric seen so far, and the identity of the
+
    dir = directly connected
  neighbor that sent it.  They replace this information whenever they
+
    unreach = unreachable
  see a better (smaller) metric.  This allows them to compute the
 
  minimum incrementally, without having to store data from all of the
 
  neighbors.
 
  
  There is one other difference between the algorithm as described in
+
Here's the problemB is able to get rid of its failed route using a
  texts and those used in real protocols such as RIP: the description
+
timeout mechanismBut vestiges of that route persist in the system
  above would have each entity include an entry for itself, showing a
+
for a long timeInitially, A and C still think they can get to D
  distance of zero. In fact this is not generally done.  Recall that
+
via BSo, they keep sending updates listing metrics of 3.  In the
  all entities on a network are normally summarized by a single entry
+
next iteration, B will then claim that it can get to D via either A
  for the networkConsider the situation of a host or gateway G that
+
or C.  Of course, it can't.  The routes being claimed by A and C are
  is connected to network A.  C represents the cost of using network A
+
now gone, but they have no way of knowing that yetAnd even when
  (usually a metric of one)(Recall that we are assuming that the
+
they discover that their routes via B have gone away, they each think
  internal structure of a network is not visible to IP, and thus the
+
there is a route available via the other.  Eventually the system
  cost of going between any two entities on it is the same.) In
+
converges, as all the mathematics claims it must.  But it can take
  principle, G should get a message from every other entity H on
+
some time to do soThe worst case is when a network becomes
  network A, showing a cost of 0 to get from that entity to itself.  G
+
completely inaccessible from some part of the systemIn that case,
  would then compute C + 0 as the distance to HRather than having G
+
the metrics may increase slowly in a pattern like the one above until
  look at all of these identical messages, it simply starts out by
+
they finally reach infinityFor this reason, the problem is called
  making an entry for network A in its table, and assigning it a metric
+
"counting to infinity".
  of CThis entry for network A should be thought of as summarizing
 
  the entries for all other entities on network AThe only entity on
 
  A that can't be summarized by that common entry is G itself, since
 
  the cost of going from G to G is 0, not C.  But since we never need
 
  those 0 entries, we can safely get along with just the single entry
 
  for network ANote one other implication of this strategy: because
 
  we don't need to use the 0 entries for anything, hosts that do not
 
  function as gateways don't need to send any update messagesClearly
 
  hosts that don't function as gateways (i.e., hosts that are connected
 
  to only one network) can have no useful information to contribute
 
  other than their own entry D(i,i) = 0.  As they have only the one
 
  interface, it is easy to see that a route to any other network
 
  through them will simply go in that interface and then come right
 
  back out it.  Thus the cost of such a route will be greater than the
 
  best cost by at least CSince we don't need the 0 entries, non-
 
  gateways need not participate in the routing protocol at all.
 
  
  Let us summarize what a host or gateway G does.  For each destination
+
You should now see why "infinity" is chosen to be as small as
  in the system, G will keep a current estimate of the metric for that
+
possible.  If a network becomes completely inaccessible, we want
  destination (i.e., the total cost of getting to it) and the identity
+
counting to infinity to be stopped as soon as possibleInfinity
  of the neighboring gateway on whose data that metric is based.  If
+
must be large enough that no real route is that bigBut it
  the destination is on a network that is directly connected to G, then
 
  G simply uses an entry that shows the cost of using the network, and
 
  the fact that no gateway is needed to get to the destinationIt is
 
  easy to show that once the computation has converged to the correct
 
  metrics, the neighbor that is recorded by this technique is in fact
 
  the first gateway on the path to the destination(If there are
 
  
 +
shouldn't be any bigger than required.  Thus the choice of infinity
 +
is a tradeoff between network size and speed of convergence in case
 +
counting to infinity happens.  The designers of RIP believed that the
 +
protocol was unlikely to be practical for networks with a diameter
 +
larger than 15.
  
 +
There are several things that can be done to prevent problems like
 +
this.  The ones used by RIP are called "split horizon with poisoned
 +
reverse", and "triggered updates".
  
Hedrick                                                        [Page 9]
+
==== Split horizon ====
  
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
+
Note that some of the problem above is caused by the fact that A and
 +
C are engaged in a pattern of mutual deception.  Each claims to be
 +
able to get to D via the other.  This can be prevented by being a bit
 +
more careful about where information is sent.  In particular, it is
 +
never useful to claim reachability for a destination network to the
 +
neighbor(s) from which the route was learned.  "Split horizon" is a
 +
scheme for avoiding problems caused by including routes in updates
 +
sent to the gateway from which they were learned.  The "simple split
 +
horizon" scheme omits routes learned from one neighbor in updates
 +
sent to that neighbor.  "Split horizon with poisoned reverse"
 +
includes such routes in updates, but sets their metrics to infinity.
  
 +
If A thinks it can get to D via C, its messages to C should indicate
 +
that D is unreachable.  If the route through C is real, then C either
 +
has a direct connection to D, or a connection through some other
 +
gateway.  C's route can't possibly go back to A, since that forms a
 +
loop.  By telling C that D is unreachable, A simply guards against
 +
the possibility that C might get confused and believe that there is a
 +
route through A.  This is obvious for a point to point line.  But
 +
consider the possibility that A and C are connected by a broadcast
 +
network such as an Ethernet, and there are other gateways on that
 +
network.  If A has a route through C, it should indicate that D is
 +
unreachable when talking to any other gateway on that network.  The
 +
other gateways on the network can get to C themselves.  They would
 +
never need to get to C via A.  If A's best route is really through C,
 +
no other gateway on that network needs to know that A can reach D.
 +
This is fortunate, because it means that the same update message that
 +
is used for C can be used for all other gateways on the same network.
 +
Thus, update messages can be sent by broadcast.
  
  several equally good paths, it is the first gateway on one of them.)
+
In general, split horizon with poisoned reverse is safer than simple
  This combination of destination, metric, and gateway is typically
+
split horizon. If two gateways have routes pointing at each other,
  referred to as a route to the destination with that metric, using
+
advertising reverse routes with a metric of 16 will break the loop
  that gateway.
+
immediately.  If the reverse routes are simply not advertised, the
 +
erroneous routes will have to be eliminated by waiting for a timeout.
 +
However, poisoned reverse does have a disadvantage: it increases the
  
  The method so far only has a way to lower the metric, as the existing
+
size of the routing messagesConsider the case of a campus backbone
  metric is kept until a smaller one shows upIt is possible that the
+
connecting a number of different buildingsIn each building, there
  initial estimate might be too lowThus, there must be a way to
+
is a gateway connecting the backbone to a local network.  Consider
  increase the metricIt turns out to be sufficient to use the
+
what routing updates those gateways should broadcast on the backbone
  following rule: suppose the current route to a destination has metric
+
networkAll that the rest of the network really needs to know about
  D and uses gateway GIf a new set of information arrived from some
+
each gateway is what local networks it is connected toUsing simple
  source other than G, only update the route if the new metric is
+
split horizon, only those routes would appear in update messages sent
  better than DBut if a new set of information arrives from G
+
by the gateway to the backbone networkIf split horizon with
  itself, always update D to the new value.  It is easy to show that
+
poisoned reverse is used, the gateway must mention all routes that it
  with this rule, the incremental update process produces the same
+
learns from the backbone, with metrics of 16If the system is
  routes as a calculation that remembers the latest information from
+
large, this can result in a large update message, almost all of whose
  all the neighbors and does an explicit minimum(Note that the
+
entries indicate unreachable networks.
  discussion so far assumes that the network configuration is static.
 
  It does not allow for the possibility that a system might fail.)
 
  
  To summarize, here is the basic distance vector algorithm as it has
+
In a static sense, advertising reverse routes with a metric of 16
  been developed so far(Note that this is not a statement of the RIP
+
provides no additional informationIf there are many gateways on
  protocolThere are several refinements still to be added.)  The
+
one broadcast network, these extra entries can use significant
  following procedure is carried out by every entity that participates
+
bandwidthThe reason they are there is to improve dynamic behavior.
  in the routing protocolThis must include all of the gateways in
+
When topology changes, mentioning routes that should not go through
  the systemHosts that are not gateways may participate as well.
+
the gateway as well as those that should can speed up convergence.
 +
However, in some situations, network managers may prefer to accept
 +
somewhat slower convergence in order to minimize routing overhead.
 +
Thus implementors may at their option implement simple split horizon
 +
rather than split horizon with poisoned reverse, or they may provide
 +
a configuration option that allows the network manager to choose
 +
which behavior to useIt is also permissible to implement hybrid
 +
schemes that advertise some reverse routes with a metric of 16 and
 +
omit othersAn example of such a scheme would be to use a metric of
 +
16 for reverse routes for a certain period of time after routing
 +
changes involving them, and thereafter omitting them from updates.
  
      - Keep a table with an entry for every possible destination
+
==== Triggered updates ====
        in the system.  The entry contains the distance D to the
 
        destination, and the first gateway G on the route to that
 
        network.  Conceptually, there should be an entry for the
 
        entity itself, with metric 0, but this is not actually
 
        included.
 
  
      - Periodically, send a routing update to every neighborThe
+
Split horizon with poisoned reverse will prevent any routing loops
        update is a set of messages that contain all of the
+
that involve only two gateways.  However, it is still possible to end
        information from the routing tableIt contains an entry
+
up with patterns in which three gateways are engaged in mutual
        for each destination, with the distance shown to that
+
deceptionFor example, A may believe it has a route through B, B
        destination.
+
through C, and C through A.  Split horizon cannot stop such a loop.
 +
This loop will only be resolved when the metric reaches infinity and
 +
the network involved is then declared unreachableTriggered updates
 +
are an attempt to speed up this convergence.  To get triggered
 +
updates, we simply add a rule that whenever a gateway changes the
 +
metric for a route, it is required to send update messages almost
 +
immediately, even if it is not yet time for one of the regular update
 +
message.  (The timing details will differ from protocol to protocol.
 +
Some distance vector protocols, including RIP, specify a small time
 +
delay, in order to avoid having triggered updates generate excessive
 +
network traffic.)  Note how this combines with the rules for
 +
computing new metrics.  Suppose a gateway's route to destination N
  
      - When a routing update arrives from a neighbor G', add the
+
goes through gateway G.  If an update arrives from G itself, the
        cost associated with the network that is shared with G'.
+
receiving gateway is required to believe the new information, whether
        (This should be the network over which the update arrived.)
+
the new metric is higher or lower than the old one. If the result is
        Call the resulting distance D'Compare the resulting
+
a change in metric, then the receiving gateway will send triggered
        distances with the current routing table entriesIf the
+
updates to all the hosts and gateways directly connected to it.  They
        new distance D' for N is smaller than the existing value D,
+
in turn may each send updates to their neighbors.  The result is a
        adopt the new routeThat is, change the table entry for N
+
cascade of triggered updates.  It is easy to show which gateways and
        to have metric D' and gateway G'If G' is the gateway
+
hosts are involved in the cascade. Suppose a gateway G times out a
 +
route to destination NG will send triggered updates to all of its
 +
neighborsHowever, the only neighbors who will believe the new
 +
information are those whose routes for N go through G.  The other
 +
gateways and hosts will see this as information about a new route
 +
that is worse than the one they are already using, and ignore it.
 +
The neighbors whose routes go through G will update their metrics and
 +
send triggered updates to all of their neighbors.  Again, only those
 +
neighbors whose routes go through them will pay attentionThus, the
 +
triggered updates will propagate backwards along all paths leading to
 +
gateway G, updating the metrics to infinityThis propagation will
 +
stop as soon as it reaches a portion of the network whose route to
 +
destination N takes some other path.
  
 +
If the system could be made to sit still while the cascade of
 +
triggered updates happens, it would be possible to prove that
 +
counting to infinity will never happen.  Bad routes would always be
 +
removed immediately, and so no routing loops could form.
  
 +
Unfortunately, things are not so nice.  While the triggered updates
 +
are being sent, regular updates may be happening at the same time.
 +
Gateways that haven't received the triggered update yet will still be
 +
sending out information based on the route that no longer exists.  It
 +
is possible that after the triggered update has gone through a
 +
gateway, it might receive a normal update from one of these gateways
 +
that hasn't yet gotten the word.  This could reestablish an orphaned
 +
remnant of the faulty route.  If triggered updates happen quickly
 +
enough, this is very unlikely.  However, counting to infinity is
 +
still possible.
  
Hedrick                                                        [Page 10]
+
== Specifications for the protocol ==
  
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
+
RIP is intended to allow hosts and gateways to exchange information
 +
for computing routes through an IP-based network.  RIP is a distance
 +
vector protocol.  Thus, it has the general features described in
 +
section 2.  RIP may be implemented by both hosts and gateways.  As in
 +
most IP documentation, the term "host" will be used here to cover
 +
either.  RIP is used to convey information about routes to
 +
"destinations", which may be individual hosts, networks, or a special
 +
destination used to convey a default route.
  
 +
Any host that uses RIP is assumed to have interfaces to one or more
 +
networks.  These are referred to as its "directly-connected
 +
networks".  The protocol relies on access to certain information
 +
about each of these networks.  The most important is its metric or
 +
"cost".  The metric of a network is an integer between 1 and 15
 +
inclusive.  It is set in some manner not specified in this protocol.
 +
Most existing implementations always use a metric of 1.  New
 +
implementations should allow the system administrator to set the cost
 +
of each network.  In addition to the cost, each network will have an
 +
IP network number and a subnet mask associated with it.  These are to
 +
be set by the system administrator in a manner not specified in this
 +
protocol.
  
        from which the existing route came, i.e., G' = G, then use
+
Note that the rules specified in section 3.2 assume that there is a
        the new metric even if it is larger than the old one.
+
single subnet mask applying to each IP network, and that only the
 +
subnet masks for directly-connected networks are known.  There may be
 +
systems that use different subnet masks for different subnets within
 +
a single network. There may also be instances where it is desirable
 +
for a system to know the subnets masks of distant networks. However,
 +
such situations will require modifications of the rules which govern
 +
the spread of subnet information.  Such modifications raise issues of
 +
interoperability, and thus must be viewed as modifying the protocol.
  
2.1. Dealing with changes in topology
+
Each host that implements RIP is assumed to have a routing table.
 +
This table has one entry for every destination that is reachable
 +
through the system described by RIP. Each entry contains at least
 +
the following information:
  
   The discussion above assumes that the topology of the network is
+
   - The IP address of the destination.
  fixed.  In practice, gateways and lines often fail and come back up.
 
  To handle this possibility, we need to modify the algorithm slightly.
 
  The theoretical version of the algorithm involved a minimum over all
 
  immediate neighbors.  If the topology changes, the set of neighbors
 
  changes.  Therefore, the next time the calculation is done, the
 
  change will be reflected.  However, as mentioned above, actual
 
  implementations use an incremental version of the minimization.  Only
 
  the best route to any given destination is remembered.  If the
 
  gateway involved in that route should crash, or the network
 
  connection to it break, the calculation might never reflect the
 
  change.  The algorithm as shown so far depends upon a gateway
 
  notifying its neighbors if its metrics change.  If the gateway
 
  crashes, then it has no way of notifying neighbors of a change.
 
  
   In order to handle problems of this kind, distance vector protocols
+
   - A metric, which represents the total cost of getting a
  must make some provision for timing out routes.  The details depend
+
    datagram from the host to that destinationThis metric is
  upon the specific protocol.  As an example, in RIP every gateway that
+
    the sum of the costs associated with the networks that
  participates in routing sends an update message to all its neighbors
+
    would be traversed in getting to the destination.
  once every 30 seconds.  Suppose the current route for network N uses
 
  gateway G.  If we don't hear from G for 180 seconds, we can assume
 
  that either the gateway has crashed or the network connecting us to
 
  it has become unusableThus, we mark the route as invalid.  When we
 
  hear from another neighbor that has a valid route to N, the valid
 
  route will replace the invalid one.  Note that we wait for 180
 
  seconds before timing out a route even though we expect to hear from
 
  each neighbor every 30 seconds.  Unfortunately, messages are
 
  occasionally lost by networks.  Thus, it is probably not a good idea
 
  to invalidate a route based on a single missed message.
 
  
   As we will see below, it is useful to have a way to notify neighbors
+
   - The IP address of the next gateway along the path to the
  that there currently isn't a valid route to some network.  RIP, along
+
    destination.  If the destination is on one of the
  with several other protocols of this class, does this through a
+
    directly-connected networks, this item is not needed.
  normal update message, by marking that network as unreachable.  A
 
  specific metric value is chosen to indicate an unreachable
 
  destination; that metric value is larger than the largest valid
 
  metric that we expect to seeIn the existing implementation of RIP,
 
  16 is used.  This value is normally referred to as "infinity", since
 
  it is larger than the largest valid metric.  16 may look like a
 
  surprisingly small number.  It is chosen to be this small for reasons
 
  that we will see shortly.  In most implementations, the same
 
  convention is used internally to flag a route as invalid.
 
  
 +
  - A flag to indicate that information about the route has
 +
    changed recently.  This will be referred to as the "route
 +
    change flag."
  
 +
  - Various timers associated with the route.  See section 3.3
 +
    for more details on them.
  
 +
The entries for the directly-connected networks are set up by the
 +
host, using information gathered by means not specified in this
  
Hedrick                                                        [Page 11]
+
protocol.  The metric for a directly-connected network is set to the
 +
cost of that network.  In existing RIP implementations, 1 is always
 +
used for the cost.  In that case, the RIP metric reduces to a simple
 +
hop-count.  More complex metrics may be used when it is desirable to
 +
show preference for some networks over others, for example because of
 +
differences in bandwidth or reliability.
  
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
+
Implementors may also choose to allow the system administrator to
 +
enter additional routes.  These would most likely be routes to hosts
 +
or networks outside the scope of the routing system.
  
 +
Entries for destinations other these initial ones are added and
 +
updated by the algorithms described in the following sections.
  
2.2. Preventing instability
+
In order for the protocol to provide complete information on routing,
 +
every gateway in the system must participate in it. Hosts that are
 +
not gateways need not participate, but many implementations make
 +
provisions for them to listen to routing information in order to
 +
allow them to maintain their routing tables.
  
  The algorithm as presented up to this point will always allow a host
+
=== Message formats ===
  or gateway to calculate a correct routing table.  However, that is
 
  still not quite enough to make it useful in practice.  The proofs
 
  referred to above only show that the routing tables will converge to
 
  the correct values in finite time.  They do not guarantee that this
 
  time will be small enough to be useful, nor do they say what will
 
  happen to the metrics for networks that become inaccessible.
 
  
  It is easy enough to extend the mathematics to handle routes becoming
+
RIP is a UDP-based protocolEach host that uses RIP has a routing
  inaccessibleThe convention suggested above will do that.  We
+
process that sends and receives datagrams on UDP port number 520.
  choose a large metric value to represent "infinity".  This value must
+
All communications directed at another host's RIP processor are sent
  be large enough that no real metric would ever get that large. For
+
to port 520.  All routing update messages are sent from port 520.
  the purposes of this example, we will use the value 16.  Suppose a
+
Unsolicited routing update messages have both the source and
  network becomes inaccessible.  All of the immediately neighboring
+
destination port equal to 520Those sent in response to a request
  gateways time out and set the metric for that network to 16. For
+
are sent to the port from which the request cameSpecific queries
  purposes of analysis, we can assume that all the neighboring gateways
+
and debugging requests may be sent from ports other than 520, but
  have gotten a new piece of hardware that connects them directly to
+
they are directed to port 520 on the target machine.
  the vanished network, with a cost of 16Since that is the only
 
  connection to the vanished network, all the other gateways in the
 
  system will converge to new routes that go through one of those
 
  gateways.  It is easy to see that once convergence has happened, all
 
  the gateways will have metrics of at least 16 for the vanished
 
  networkGateways one hop away from the original neighbors would end
 
  up with metrics of at least 17; gateways two hops away would end up
 
  with at least 18, etc.  As these metrics are larger than the maximum
 
  metric value, they are all set to 16.  It is obvious that the system
 
  will now converge to a metric of 16 for the vanished network at all
 
  gateways.
 
  
  Unfortunately, the question of how long convergence will take is not
+
There are provisions in the protocol to allow "silent" RIP processes.
  amenable to quite so simple an answerBefore going any further, it
+
A silent process is one that normally does not send out any messages.
  will be useful to look at an example (taken from [2]). Note, by the
+
However, it listens to messages sent by othersA silent RIP might
  way, that what we are about to show will not happen with a correct
+
be used by hosts that do not act as gateways, but wish to listen to
  implementation of RIP.  We are trying to show why certain features
+
routing updates in order to monitor local gateways and to keep their
  are needed.  Note that the letters correspond to gateways, and the
+
internal routing tables up to date.  (See [5] for a discussion of
  lines to networks.
+
various ways that hosts can keep track of network topology.A
 +
gateway that has lost contact with all but one of its networks might
 +
choose to become silent, since it is effectively no longer a gateway.
  
            A-----B
+
However, this should not be done if there is any chance that
            \  / \
+
neighboring gateways might depend upon its messages to detect that
              \ / |
+
the failed network has come back into operation. (The 4BSD routed
              C  /    all networks have cost 1, except
+
program uses routing packets to monitor the operation of point-to-
              | /    for the direct link from C to D, which
+
point links.)
              |/      has cost 10
 
              D
 
              |<=== target network
 
  
 +
The packet format is shown in Figure 1.
  
 +
  Format of datagrams containing network information.  Field sizes
 +
  are given in octets.  Unless otherwise specified, fields contain
 +
  binary integers, in normal Internet order with the most-significant
 +
  octet first.  Each tick mark represents one bit.
  
 +
    0                  1                  2                  3 3
 +
    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +
  | command (1)  | version (1)  |      must be zero (2)        |
 +
  +---------------+---------------+-------------------------------+
 +
  | address family identifier (2) |      must be zero (2)        |
 +
  +-------------------------------+-------------------------------+
 +
  |                        IP address (4)                        |
 +
  +---------------------------------------------------------------+
 +
  |                        must be zero (4)                      |
 +
  +---------------------------------------------------------------+
 +
  |                        must be zero (4)                      |
 +
  +---------------------------------------------------------------+
 +
  |                          metric (4)                          |
 +
  +---------------------------------------------------------------+
 +
                                  .
 +
                                  .
 +
                                  .
 +
  The portion of the datagram from address family identifier through
 +
  metric may appear up to 25 times.  IP address is the usual 4-octet
 +
  Internet address, in network order.
  
Hedrick                                                        [Page 12]
+
                      Figure 1.  Packet format
  
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
+
Every datagram contains a command, a version number, and possible
 +
arguments.  This document describes version 1 of the protocol.
 +
Details of processing the version number are described in section
 +
3.4.  The command field is used to specify the purpose of this
 +
datagram.  Here is a summary of the commands implemented in version
 +
1:
  
 +
1 - request    A request for the responding system to send all or
 +
                part of its routing table.
  
   Each gateway will have a table showing a route to each network.
+
2 - response   A message containing all or part of the sender's
 +
                routing table.  This message may be sent in response
 +
                to a request or poll, or it may be an update message
 +
                generated by the sender.
  
  However, for purposes of this illustration, we show only the routes
+
3 - traceon    Obsolete.  Messages containing this command are to be
  from each gateway to the network marked at the bottom of the diagram.
+
                ignored.
  
            D: directly connected, metric 1
+
4 - traceoff    Obsolete. Messages containing this command are to be
            B:  route via D, metric 2
+
                ignored.
            C:  route via B, metric 3
 
            A:  route via B, metric 3
 
  
   Now suppose that the link from B to D failsThe routes should now
+
5 - reserved   This value is used by Sun Microsystems for its own
  adjust to use the link from C to D. Unfortunately, it will take a
+
                purposesIf new commands are added in any
  while for this to this to happen.  The routing changes start when B
+
                succeeding version, they should begin with 6.
  notices that the route to D is no longer usable.  For simplicity, the
+
                Messages containing this command may safely be
  chart below assumes that all gateways send updates at the same time.
+
                ignored by implementations that do not choose to
  The chart shows the metric for the target network, as it appears in
+
                respond to it.
  the routing table at each gateway.
 
  
        time ------>
+
For request and response, the rest of the datagram contains a list of
 +
destinations, with information about each.  Each entry in this list
 +
contains a destination network or host, and the metric for it.  The
 +
packet format is intended to allow RIP to carry routing information
 +
for several different protocols.  Thus, each entry has an address
 +
family identifier to indicate what type of address is specified in
 +
that entry.  This document only describes routing for Internet
 +
networks.  The address family identifier for IP is 2.  None of the
 +
RIP implementations available to the author implement any other type
 +
of address.  However, to allow for future development,
 +
implementations are required to skip entries that specify address
 +
families that are not supported by the implementation.  (The size of
 +
these entries will be the same as the size of an entry specifying an
 +
IP address.) Processing of the message continues normally after any
 +
unsupported entries are skipped.  The IP address is the usual
 +
Internet address, stored as 4 octets in network order.  The metric
 +
field must contain a value between 1 and 15 inclusive, specifying the
 +
current metric for the destination, or the value 16, which indicates
 +
that the destination is not reachable.  Each route sent by a gateway
 +
supercedes any previous route to the same destination from the same
 +
gateway.
  
        D: dir, 1  dir, 1  dir, 1  dir, 1 ..dir, 1  dir, 1
+
The maximum datagram size is 512 octets. This includes only the
        B: unreach C,  4  C,  5  C,  6      C,  11  C,  12
+
portions of the datagram described above. It does not count the IP
        C: B,   3  A,  4  A,  5  A,  6      A,  11  D,  11
+
or UDP headersThe commands that involve network information allow
        A: B,  3  C,  4  C,  5  C,  6      C,  11  C,  12
+
information to be split across several datagrams. No special
 +
provisions are needed for continuations, since correct results will
 +
occur if the datagrams are processed individually.
  
        dir = directly connected
+
=== Addressing considerations ===
        unreach = unreachable
 
  
  Here's the problem:  B is able to get rid of its failed route using a
+
As indicated in section 2, distance vector routing can be used to
  timeout mechanism.  But vestiges of that route persist in the system
+
describe routes to individual hosts or to networks.  The RIP protocol
  for a long time.  Initially, A and C still think they can get to D
+
allows either of these possibilitiesThe destinations appearing in
  via B.  So, they keep sending updates listing metrics of 3.  In the
+
request and response messages can be networks, hosts, or a special
  next iteration, B will then claim that it can get to D via either A
+
code used to indicate a default address.  In general, the kinds of
  or C.  Of course, it can't.  The routes being claimed by A and C are
+
routes actually used will depend upon the routing strategy used for
  now gone, but they have no way of knowing that yetAnd even when
+
the particular networkMany networks are set up so that routing
  they discover that their routes via B have gone away, they each think
 
  there is a route available via the other.  Eventually the system
 
  converges, as all the mathematics claims it must.  But it can take
 
  some time to do so.  The worst case is when a network becomes
 
  completely inaccessible from some part of the system.  In that case,
 
  the metrics may increase slowly in a pattern like the one above until
 
  they finally reach infinityFor this reason, the problem is called
 
  "counting to infinity".
 
  
  You should now see why "infinity" is chosen to be as small as
+
information for individual hosts is not needed.  If every host on a
  possible.  If a network becomes completely inaccessible, we want
+
given network or subnet is accessible through the same gateways, then
  counting to infinity to be stopped as soon as possibleInfinity
+
there is no reason to mention individual hosts in the routing tables.
  must be large enough that no real route is that bigBut it
+
However, networks that include point to point lines sometimes require
 +
gateways to keep track of routes to certain hosts.  Whether this
 +
feature is required depends upon the addressing and routing approach
 +
used in the system.  Thus, some implementations may choose not to
 +
support host routesIf host routes are not supported, they are to
 +
be dropped when they are received in response messages(See section
 +
3.4.2.)
  
 +
The RIP packet formats do not distinguish among various types of
 +
address.  Fields that are labeled "address" can contain any of the
 +
following:
  
 +
  host address
 +
  subnet number
 +
  network number
 +
  0, indicating a default route
  
Hedrick                                                        [Page 13]
+
Entities that use RIP are assumed to use the most specific
 +
information available when routing a datagram.  That is, when routing
 +
a datagram, its destination address must first be checked against the
 +
list of host addresses.  Then it must be checked to see whether it
 +
matches any known subnet or network number.  Finally, if none of
 +
these match, the default route is used.
  
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
+
When a host evaluates information that it receives via RIP, its
 +
interpretation of an address depends upon whether it knows the subnet
 +
mask that applies to the net.  If so, then it is possible to
 +
determine the meaning of the address.  For example, consider net
 +
128.6.  It has a subnet mask of 255.255.255.0.  Thus 128.6.0.0 is a
 +
network number, 128.6.4.0 is a subnet number, and 128.6.4.1 is a host
 +
address.  However, if the host does not know the subnet mask,
 +
evaluation of an address may be ambiguous.  If there is a non-zero
 +
host part, there is no clear way to determine whether the address
 +
represents a subnet number or a host address.  As a subnet number
 +
would be useless without the subnet mask, addresses are assumed to
 +
represent hosts in this situation.  In order to avoid this sort of
 +
ambiguity, hosts must not send subnet routes to hosts that cannot be
 +
expected to know the appropriate subnet mask.  Normally hosts only
 +
know the subnet masks for directly-connected networks.  Therefore,
 +
unless special provisions have been made, routes to a subnet must not
 +
be sent outside the network of which the subnet is a part.
  
 +
This filtering is carried out by the gateways at the "border" of the
 +
subnetted network.  These are gateways that connect that network with
 +
some other network.  Within the subnetted network, each subnet is
  
  shouldn't be any bigger than requiredThus the choice of infinity
+
treated as an individual networkRouting entries for each subnet
  is a tradeoff between network size and speed of convergence in case
+
are circulated by RIP.  However, border gateways send only a single
  counting to infinity happensThe designers of RIP believed that the
+
entry for the network as a whole to hosts in other networks.  This
  protocol was unlikely to be practical for networks with a diameter
+
means that a border gateway will send different information to
  larger than 15.
+
different neighborsFor neighbors connected to the subnetted
 +
network, it generates a list of all subnets to which it is directly
 +
connected, using the subnet number.  For neighbors connected to other
 +
networks, it makes a single entry for the network as a whole, showing
 +
the metric associated with that network.  (This metric would normally
 +
be the smallest metric for the subnets to which the gateway is
 +
attached.)
  
  There are several things that can be done to prevent problems like
+
Similarly, border gateways must not mention host routes for hosts
  thisThe ones used by RIP are called "split horizon with poisoned
+
within one of the directly-connected networks in messages to other
  reverse", and "triggered updates".
+
networksThose routes will be subsumed by the single entry for the
 +
network as a whole.  We do not specify what to do with host routes
 +
for "distant" hosts (i.e., hosts not part of one of the directly-
 +
connected networks).  Generally, these routes indicate some host that
 +
is reachable via a route that does not support other hosts on the
 +
network of which the host is a part.
  
2.2.1. Split horizon
+
The special address 0.0.0.0 is used to describe a default route.  A
 +
default route is used when it is not convenient to list every
 +
possible network in the RIP updates, and when one or more closely-
 +
connected gateways in the system are prepared to handle traffic to
 +
the networks that are not listed explicitly.  These gateways should
 +
create RIP entries for the address 0.0.0.0, just as if it were a
 +
network to which they are connected.  The decision as to how gateways
 +
create entries for 0.0.0.0 is left to the implementor.  Most
 +
commonly, the system administrator will be provided with a way to
 +
specify which gateways should create entries for 0.0.0.0.  However,
 +
other mechanisms are possible.  For example, an implementor might
 +
decide that any gateway that speaks EGP should be declared to be a
 +
default gateway.  It may be useful to allow the network administrator
 +
to choose the metric to be used in these entries.  If there is more
 +
than one default gateway, this will make it possible to express a
 +
preference for one over the other.  The entries for 0.0.0.0 are
 +
handled by RIP in exactly the same manner as if there were an actual
 +
network with this address.  However, the entry is used to route any
 +
datagram whose destination address does not match any other network
 +
in the table.  Implementations are not required to support this
 +
convention.  However, it is strongly recommended.  Implementations
 +
that do not support 0.0.0.0 must ignore entries with this address.
 +
In such cases, they must not pass the entry on in their own RIP
 +
updates.  System administrators should take care to make sure that
 +
routes to 0.0.0.0 do not propagate further than is intended.
 +
Generally, each autonomous system has its own preferred default
 +
gateway.  Thus, routes involving 0.0.0.0 should generally not leave
  
  Note that some of the problem above is caused by the fact that A and
+
the boundary of an autonomous systemThe mechanisms for enforcing
  C are engaged in a pattern of mutual deceptionEach claims to be
+
this are not specified in this document.
  able to get to D via the other.  This can be prevented by being a bit
 
  more careful about where information is sent.  In particular, it is
 
  never useful to claim reachability for a destination network to the
 
  neighbor(s) from which the route was learned.  "Split horizon" is a
 
  scheme for avoiding problems caused by including routes in updates
 
  sent to the gateway from which they were learned.  The "simple split
 
  horizon" scheme omits routes learned from one neighbor in updates
 
  sent to that neighbor.  "Split horizon with poisoned reverse"
 
  includes such routes in updates, but sets their metrics to infinity.
 
  
  If A thinks it can get to D via C, its messages to C should indicate
+
=== Timers ===
  that D is unreachable.  If the route through C is real, then C either
 
  has a direct connection to D, or a connection through some other
 
  gateway.  C's route can't possibly go back to A, since that forms a
 
  loop.  By telling C that D is unreachable, A simply guards against
 
  the possibility that C might get confused and believe that there is a
 
  route through A.  This is obvious for a point to point line.  But
 
  consider the possibility that A and C are connected by a broadcast
 
  network such as an Ethernet, and there are other gateways on that
 
  network.  If A has a route through C, it should indicate that D is
 
  unreachable when talking to any other gateway on that network.  The
 
  other gateways on the network can get to C themselves.  They would
 
  never need to get to C via A.  If A's best route is really through C,
 
  no other gateway on that network needs to know that A can reach D.
 
  This is fortunate, because it means that the same update message that
 
  is used for C can be used for all other gateways on the same network.
 
  Thus, update messages can be sent by broadcast.
 
  
  In general, split horizon with poisoned reverse is safer than simple
+
This section describes all events that are triggered by timers.
  split horizon.  If two gateways have routes pointing at each other,
 
  advertising reverse routes with a metric of 16 will break the loop
 
  immediately.  If the reverse routes are simply not advertised, the
 
  erroneous routes will have to be eliminated by waiting for a timeout.
 
  However, poisoned reverse does have a disadvantage: it increases the
 
  
 +
Every 30 seconds, the output process is instructed to generate a
 +
complete response to every neighboring gateway.  When there are many
 +
gateways on a single network, there is a tendency for them to
 +
synchronize with each other such that they all issue updates at the
 +
same time.  This can happen whenever the 30 second timer is affected
 +
by the processing load on the system.  It is undesirable for the
 +
update messages to become synchronized, since it can lead to
 +
unnecessary collisions on broadcast networks.  Thus, implementations
 +
are required to take one of two precautions.
  
 +
  - The 30-second updates are triggered by a clock whose rate
 +
    is not affected by system load or the time required to
 +
    service the previous update timer.
  
Hedrick                                                        [Page 14]
+
  - The 30-second timer is offset by addition of a small random
 +
    time each time it is set.
  
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
+
There are two timers associated with each route, a "timeout" and a
 +
"garbage-collection time".  Upon expiration of the timeout, the route
 +
is no longer valid.  However, it is retained in the table for a short
 +
time, so that neighbors can be notified that the route has been
 +
dropped.  Upon expiration of the garbage-collection timer, the route
 +
is finally removed from the tables.
  
 +
The timeout is initialized when a route is established, and any time
 +
an update message is received for the route.  If 180 seconds elapse
 +
from the last time the timeout was initialized, the route is
 +
considered to have expired, and the deletion process which we are
 +
about to describe is started for it.
  
  size of the routing messages.  Consider the case of a campus backbone
+
Deletions can occur for one of two reasons: (1) the timeout expires,
  connecting a number of different buildings.  In each building, there
+
or (2) the metric is set to 16 because of an update received from the
  is a gateway connecting the backbone to a local network.  Consider
+
current gateway.  (See section 3.4.2 for a discussion processing
  what routing updates those gateways should broadcast on the backbone
+
updates from other gateways.) In either case, the following events
  network.  All that the rest of the network really needs to know about
+
happen:
  each gateway is what local networks it is connected toUsing simple
 
  split horizon, only those routes would appear in update messages sent
 
  by the gateway to the backbone network. If split horizon with
 
  poisoned reverse is used, the gateway must mention all routes that it
 
  learns from the backbone, with metrics of 16If the system is
 
  large, this can result in a large update message, almost all of whose
 
  entries indicate unreachable networks.
 
  
   In a static sense, advertising reverse routes with a metric of 16
+
   - The garbage-collection timer is set for 120 seconds.
  provides no additional information.  If there are many gateways on
 
  one broadcast network, these extra entries can use significant
 
  bandwidth.  The reason they are there is to improve dynamic behavior.
 
  When topology changes, mentioning routes that should not go through
 
  the gateway as well as those that should can speed up convergence.
 
  However, in some situations, network managers may prefer to accept
 
  somewhat slower convergence in order to minimize routing overhead.
 
  Thus implementors may at their option implement simple split horizon
 
  rather than split horizon with poisoned reverse, or they may provide
 
  a configuration option that allows the network manager to choose
 
  which behavior to use.  It is also permissible to implement hybrid
 
  schemes that advertise some reverse routes with a metric of 16 and
 
  omit others.  An example of such a scheme would be to use a metric of
 
  16 for reverse routes for a certain period of time after routing
 
  changes involving them, and thereafter omitting them from updates.
 
  
2.2.2. Triggered updates
+
  - The metric for the route is set to 16 (infinity). This
 +
    causes the route to be removed from service.
  
   Split horizon with poisoned reverse will prevent any routing loops
+
   - A flag is set noting that this entry has been changed, and
  that involve only two gateways.  However, it is still possible to end
+
    the output process is signalled to trigger a response.
  up with patterns in which three gateways are engaged in mutual
 
  deception.  For example, A may believe it has a route through B, B
 
  through C, and C through A.  Split horizon cannot stop such a loop.
 
  This loop will only be resolved when the metric reaches infinity and
 
  the network involved is then declared unreachable.  Triggered updates
 
  are an attempt to speed up this convergence.  To get triggered
 
  updates, we simply add a rule that whenever a gateway changes the
 
  metric for a route, it is required to send update messages almost
 
  immediately, even if it is not yet time for one of the regular update
 
  message. (The timing details will differ from protocol to protocol.
 
  Some distance vector protocols, including RIP, specify a small time
 
  delay, in order to avoid having triggered updates generate excessive
 
  network traffic.)  Note how this combines with the rules for
 
  computing new metrics.  Suppose a gateway's route to destination N
 
  
 +
Until the garbage-collection timer expires, the route is included in
 +
all updates sent by this host, with a metric of 16 (infinity).  When
 +
the garbage-collection timer expires, the route is deleted from the
 +
tables.
  
 +
Should a new route to this network be established while the garbage-
 +
collection timer is running, the new route will replace the one that
 +
is about to be deleted.  In this case the garbage-collection timer
 +
must be cleared.
  
Hedrick                                                        [Page 15]
+
See section 3.5 for a discussion of a delay that is required in
 +
carrying out triggered updates.  Although implementation of that
 +
delay will require a timer, it is more natural to discuss it in
 +
section 3.5 than here.
  
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
+
=== Input processing ===
  
 +
This section will describe the handling of datagrams received on UDP
 +
port 520.  Before processing the datagrams in detail, certain general
 +
format checks must be made.  These depend upon the version number
 +
field in the datagram, as follows:
  
   goes through gateway G.  If an update arrives from G itself, the
+
   0  Datagrams whose version number is zero are to be ignored.
  receiving gateway is required to believe the new information, whether
+
      These are from a previous version of the protocol, whose
  the new metric is higher or lower than the old one.  If the result is
+
      packet format was machine-specific.
  a change in metric, then the receiving gateway will send triggered
 
  updates to all the hosts and gateways directly connected to it.  They
 
  in turn may each send updates to their neighbors.  The result is a
 
  cascade of triggered updates.  It is easy to show which gateways and
 
  hosts are involved in the cascade.  Suppose a gateway G times out a
 
  route to destination N.  G will send triggered updates to all of its
 
  neighbors. However, the only neighbors who will believe the new
 
  information are those whose routes for N go through G.  The other
 
  gateways and hosts will see this as information about a new route
 
  that is worse than the one they are already using, and ignore it.
 
  The neighbors whose routes go through G will update their metrics and
 
  send triggered updates to all of their neighbors.  Again, only those
 
  neighbors whose routes go through them will pay attention.  Thus, the
 
  triggered updates will propagate backwards along all paths leading to
 
  gateway G, updating the metrics to infinity.  This propagation will
 
  stop as soon as it reaches a portion of the network whose route to
 
  destination N takes some other path.
 
  
   If the system could be made to sit still while the cascade of
+
   1  Datagrams whose version number is one are to be processed
  triggered updates happens, it would be possible to prove that
+
      as described in the rest of this specification.  All fields
  counting to infinity will never happen.  Bad routes would always be
+
      that are described above as "must be zero" are to be checked.
  removed immediately, and so no routing loops could form.
+
      If any such field contains a non-zero value, the entire
 +
      message is to be ignored.
  
   Unfortunately, things are not so nice.  While the triggered updates
+
   >1  Datagrams whose version number are greater than one are
  are being sent, regular updates may be happening at the same time.
+
      to be processed as described in the rest of this
  Gateways that haven't received the triggered update yet will still be
+
      specificationAll fields that are described above as
  sending out information based on the route that no longer existsIt
+
      "must be zero" are to be ignoredFuture versions of the
  is possible that after the triggered update has gone through a
+
      protocol may put data into these fieldsVersion 1
  gateway, it might receive a normal update from one of these gateways
+
      implementations are to ignore this extra data and process
  that hasn't yet gotten the wordThis could reestablish an orphaned
+
      only the fields specified in this document.
  remnant of the faulty routeIf triggered updates happen quickly
 
  enough, this is very unlikely.  However, counting to infinity is
 
  still possible.
 
  
3. Specifications for the protocol
+
After checking the version number and doing any other preliminary
 +
checks, processing will depend upon the value in the command field.
  
  RIP is intended to allow hosts and gateways to exchange information
+
==== Request ====
  for computing routes through an IP-based network.  RIP is a distance
 
  vector protocol.  Thus, it has the general features described in
 
  section 2.  RIP may be implemented by both hosts and gateways.  As in
 
  most IP documentation, the term "host" will be used here to cover
 
  either.  RIP is used to convey information about routes to
 
  "destinations", which may be individual hosts, networks, or a special
 
  destination used to convey a default route.
 
  
 +
Request is used to ask for a response containing all or part of the
 +
host's routing table.  [Note that the term host is used for either
 +
host or gateway, in most cases it would be unusual for a non-gateway
 +
host to send RIP messages.]  Normally, requests are sent as
 +
broadcasts, from a UDP source port of 520.  In this case, silent
 +
processes do not respond to the request.  Silent processes are by
 +
definition processes for which we normally do not want to see routing
 +
information.  However, there may be situations involving gateway
 +
monitoring where it is desired to look at the routing table even for
 +
a silent process.  In this case, the request should be sent from a
 +
UDP port number other than 520.  If a request comes from port 520,
 +
silent processes do not respond.  If the request comes from any other
 +
port, processes must respond even if they are silent.
  
 +
The request is processed entry by entry.  If there are no entries, no
 +
response is given.  There is one special case.  If there is exactly
 +
one entry in the request, with an address family identifier of 0
 +
(meaning unspecified), and a metric of infinity (i.e., 16 for current
 +
implementations), this is a request to send the entire routing table.
 +
In that case, a call is made to the output process to send the
 +
routing table to the requesting port.
  
 +
Except for this special case, processing is quite simple.  Go down
 +
the list of entries in the request one by one.  For each entry, look
 +
up the destination in the host's routing database.  If there is a
 +
route, put that route's metric in the metric field in the datagram.
 +
If there isn't a route to the specified destination, put infinity
 +
(i.e., 16) in the metric field in the datagram.  Once all the entries
 +
have been filled in, set the command to response and send the
 +
datagram back to the port from which it came.
  
Hedrick                                                        [Page 16]
+
Note that there is a difference in handling depending upon whether
 +
the request is for a specified set of destinations, or for a complete
 +
routing table.  If the request is for a complete host table, normal
 +
output processing is done.  This includes split horizon (see section
 +
2.2.1) and subnet hiding (section 3.2), so that certain entries from
 +
the routing table will not be shown.  If the request is for specific
 +
entries, they are looked up in the host table and the information is
 +
returned.  No split horizon processing is done, and subnets are
 +
returned if requested.  We anticipate that these requests are likely
 +
to be used for different purposes.  When a host first comes up, it
 +
broadcasts requests on every connected network asking for a complete
 +
routing table.  In general, we assume that complete routing tables
 +
are likely to be used to update another host's routing table.  For
 +
this reason, split horizon and all other filtering must be used.
 +
Requests for specific networks are made only by diagnostic software,
  
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
+
and are not used for routing.  In this case, the requester would want
 +
to know the exact contents of the routing database, and would not
 +
want any information hidden.
  
 +
==== Response ====
  
  Any host that uses RIP is assumed to have interfaces to one or more
+
Responses can be received for several different reasons:
  networks.  These are referred to as its "directly-connected
 
  networks".  The protocol relies on access to certain information
 
  about each of these networks.  The most important is its metric or
 
  "cost".  The metric of a network is an integer between 1 and 15
 
  inclusive.  It is set in some manner not specified in this protocol.
 
  Most existing implementations always use a metric of 1.  New
 
  implementations should allow the system administrator to set the cost
 
  of each network.  In addition to the cost, each network will have an
 
  IP network number and a subnet mask associated with it.  These are to
 
  be set by the system administrator in a manner not specified in this
 
  protocol.
 
  
   Note that the rules specified in section 3.2 assume that there is a
+
   response to a specific query
   single subnet mask applying to each IP network, and that only the
+
   regular updates
  subnet masks for directly-connected networks are known.  There may be
+
   triggered updates triggered by a metric change
  systems that use different subnet masks for different subnets within
 
  a single network.  There may also be instances where it is desirable
 
   for a system to know the subnets masks of distant networks.  However,
 
  such situations will require modifications of the rules which govern
 
  the spread of subnet information.  Such modifications raise issues of
 
  interoperability, and thus must be viewed as modifying the protocol.
 
  
  Each host that implements RIP is assumed to have a routing table.
+
Processing is the same no matter how responses were generated.
  This table has one entry for every destination that is reachable
 
  through the system described by RIP. Each entry contains at least
 
  the following information:
 
  
      - The IP address of the destination.
+
Because processing of a response may update the host's routing table,
 +
the response must be checked carefully for validity.  The response
 +
must be ignored if it is not from port 520.  The IP source address
 +
should be checked to see whether the datagram is from a valid
 +
neighbor.  The source of the datagram must be on a directly-connected
 +
network.  It is also worth checking to see whether the response is
 +
from one of the host's own addresses.  Interfaces on broadcast
 +
networks may receive copies of their own broadcasts immediately.  If
 +
a host processes its own output as new input, confusion is likely,
 +
and such datagrams must be ignored (except as discussed in the next
 +
paragraph).
  
      - A metric, which represents the total cost of getting a
+
Before actually processing a response, it may be useful to use its
        datagram from the host to that destination.  This metric is
+
presence as input to a process for keeping track of interface status.
        the sum of the costs associated with the networks that
+
As mentioned above, we time out a route when we haven't heard from
        would be traversed in getting to the destination.
+
its gateway for a certain amount of time.  This works fine for routes
 +
that come from another gateway.  It is also desirable to know when
 +
one of our own directly-connected networks has failed.  This document
 +
does not specify any particular method for doing this, as such
 +
methods depend upon the characteristics of the network and the
 +
hardware interface to it.  However, such methods often involve
 +
listening for datagrams arriving on the interface.  Arriving
 +
datagrams can be used as an indication that the interface is working.
 +
However, some caution must be used, as it is possible for interfaces
 +
to fail in such a way that input datagrams are received, but output
 +
datagrams are never sent successfully.
  
      - The IP address of the next gateway along the path to the
+
Now that the datagram as a whole has been validated, process the
        destination.  If the destination is on one of the
+
entries in it one by one.  Again, start by doing validation.  If the
        directly-connected networks, this item is not needed.
+
metric is greater than infinity, ignore the entry.  (This should be
 +
impossible, if the other host is working correctly.  Incorrect
 +
metrics and other format errors should probably cause alerts or be
 +
logged.)  Then look at the destination address.  Check the address
 +
family identifier.  If it is not a value which is expected (e.g., 2
  
      - A flag to indicate that information about the route has
+
for Internet addresses), ignore the entry.  Now check the address
        changed recently. This will be referred to as the "route
+
itself for various kinds of inappropriate addresses.  Ignore the
        change flag."
+
entry if the address is class D or E, if it is on net 0 (except for
 +
0.0.0.0, if we accept default routes) or if it is on net 127 (the
 +
loopback network).  Also, test for a broadcast address, i.e.,
 +
anything whose host part is all ones on a network that supports
 +
broadcast, and ignore any such entry.  If the implementor has chosen
 +
not to support host routes (see section 3.2), check to see whether
 +
the host portion of the address is non-zero; if so, ignore the entry.
  
      - Various timers associated with the routeSee section 3.3
+
Recall that the address field contains a number of unused octetsIf
        for more details on them.
+
the version number of the datagram is 1, they must also be checked.
 +
If any of them is nonzero, the entry is to be ignored.  (Many of
 +
these cases indicate that the host from which the message came is not
 +
working correctly.  Thus some form of error logging or alert should
 +
be triggered.)
  
  The entries for the directly-connected networks are set up by the
+
Update the metric by adding the cost of the network on which the
  host, using information gathered by means not specified in this
+
message arrived.  If the result is greater than 16, use 16.  That is,
  
 +
  metric = MIN (metric + cost, 16)
  
 +
Now look up the address to see whether this is already a route for
 +
it.  In general, if not, we want to add one.  However, there are
 +
various exceptions.  If the metric is infinite, don't add an entry.
 +
(We would update an existing one, but we don't add new entries with
 +
infinite metric.)  We want to avoid adding routes to hosts if the
 +
host is part of a net or subnet for which we have at least as good a
 +
route.  If neither of these exceptions applies, add a new entry to
 +
the routing database.  This includes the following actions:
  
Hedrick                                                        [Page 17]
+
  - Set the destination and metric to those from the datagram.
  
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
+
  - Set the gateway to be the host from which the datagram
 +
    came.
  
 +
  - Initialize the timeout for the route. If the garbage-
 +
    collection timer is running for this route, stop it. (See
 +
    section 3.3 for a discussion of the timers.)
  
   protocol.  The metric for a directly-connected network is set to the
+
   - Set the route change flag, and signal the output process to
  cost of that network.  In existing RIP implementations, 1 is always
+
    trigger an update (see 3.5).
  used for the cost.  In that case, the RIP metric reduces to a simple
 
  hop-count. More complex metrics may be used when it is desirable to
 
  show preference for some networks over others, for example because of
 
  differences in bandwidth or reliability.
 
  
  Implementors may also choose to allow the system administrator to
+
If there is an existing route, first compare gateways.  If this
  enter additional routesThese would most likely be routes to hosts
+
datagram is from the same gateway as the existing route, reinitialize
  or networks outside the scope of the routing system.
+
the timeout.  Next compare metricsIf the datagram is from the same
 +
gateway as the existing route and the new metric is different than
 +
the old one, or if the new metric is lower than the old one, do the
  
  Entries for destinations other these initial ones are added and
+
following actions:
  updated by the algorithms described in the following sections.
 
  
   In order for the protocol to provide complete information on routing,
+
   - adopt the route from the datagramThat is, put the new
  every gateway in the system must participate in itHosts that are
+
    metric in, and set the gateway to be the host from which
  not gateways need not participate, but many implementations make
+
    the datagram came.
  provisions for them to listen to routing information in order to
 
  allow them to maintain their routing tables.
 
  
3.1. Message formats
+
  - Initialize the timeout for the route.
  
   RIP is a UDP-based protocol.  Each host that uses RIP has a routing
+
   - Set the route change flag, and signal the output process to
  process that sends and receives datagrams on UDP port number 520.
+
    trigger an update (see 3.5).
  All communications directed at another host's RIP processor are sent
 
  to port 520.  All routing update messages are sent from port 520.
 
  Unsolicited routing update messages have both the source and
 
  destination port equal to 520.  Those sent in response to a request
 
  are sent to the port from which the request came. Specific queries
 
  and debugging requests may be sent from ports other than 520, but
 
  they are directed to port 520 on the target machine.
 
  
   There are provisions in the protocol to allow "silent" RIP processes.
+
   - If the new metric is 16 (infinity), the deletion process is
  A silent process is one that normally does not send out any messages.
+
    started.
  However, it listens to messages sent by others.  A silent RIP might
 
  be used by hosts that do not act as gateways, but wish to listen to
 
  routing updates in order to monitor local gateways and to keep their
 
  internal routing tables up to date.  (See [5] for a discussion of
 
  various ways that hosts can keep track of network topology.) A
 
  gateway that has lost contact with all but one of its networks might
 
  choose to become silent, since it is effectively no longer a gateway.
 
  
  However, this should not be done if there is any chance that
+
If the new metric is 16 (infinity), this starts the process for
  neighboring gateways might depend upon its messages to detect that
+
deleting the route.  The route is no longer used for routing packets,
  the failed network has come back into operation.  (The 4BSD routed
+
and the deletion timer is started (see section 3.3).  Note that a
  program uses routing packets to monitor the operation of point-to-
+
deletion is started only when the metric is first set to 16.  If the
  point links.)
+
metric was already 16, then a new deletion is not started.  (Starting
 +
a deletion sets a timer.  The concern is that we do not want to reset
 +
the timer every 30 seconds, as new messages arrive with an infinite
 +
metric.)
  
 +
If the new metric is the same as the old one, it is simplest to do
 +
nothing further (beyond reinitializing the timeout, as specified
 +
above).  However, the 4BSD routed uses an additional heuristic here.
 +
Normally, it is senseless to change to a route with the same metric
 +
as the existing route but a different gateway.  If the existing route
 +
is showing signs of timing out, though, it may be better to switch to
 +
an equally-good alternative route immediately, rather than waiting
 +
for the timeout to happen.  (See section 3.3 for a discussion of
 +
timeouts.)  Therefore, if the new metric is the same as the old one,
 +
routed looks at the timeout for the existing route.  If it is at
 +
least halfway to the expiration point, routed switches to the new
 +
route.  That is, the gateway is changed to the source of the current
 +
message.  This heuristic is optional.
  
 +
Any entry that fails these tests is ignored, as it is no better than
 +
the current route.
  
 +
=== Output Processing ===
  
Hedrick                                                        [Page 18]
+
This section describes the processing used to create response
 +
messages that contain all or part of the routing table.  This
 +
processing may be triggered in any of the following ways:
  
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
+
  - by input processing when a request is seen.  In this case,
 +
    the resulting message is sent to only one destination.
  
 +
  - by the regular routing update.  Every 30 seconds, a
 +
    response containing the whole routing table is sent to
 +
    every neighboring gateway.  (See section 3.3.)
  
   The packet format is shown in Figure 1.
+
   - by triggered updates.  Whenever the metric for a route is
 +
    changed, an update is triggered.  (The update may be
 +
    delayed; see below.)
  
      Format of datagrams containing network informationField sizes
+
Before describing the way a message is generated for each directly-
      are given in octetsUnless otherwise specified, fields contain
+
connected network, we will comment on how the destinations are chosen
      binary integers, in normal Internet order with the most-significant
+
for the latter two cases.  Normally, when a response is to be sent to
      octet firstEach tick mark represents one bit.
+
all destinations (that is, either the regular update or a triggered
 +
update is being prepared), a response is sent to the host at the
 +
opposite end of each connected point-to-point link, and a response is
 +
broadcast on all connected networks that support broadcasting.  Thus,
 +
one response is prepared for each directly-connected network and sent
 +
to the corresponding (destination or broadcast) addressIn most
 +
cases, this reaches all neighboring gateways.  However, there are
 +
some cases where this may not be good enoughThis may involve a
 +
network that does not support broadcast (e.g., the ARPANET), or a
 +
situation involving dumb gatewaysIn such cases, it may be
 +
necessary to specify an actual list of neighboring hosts and
 +
gateways, and send a datagram to each one explicitly.  It is left to
 +
the implementor to determine whether such a mechanism is needed, and
 +
to define how the list is specified.
  
      0                  1                  2                  3 3
+
Triggered updates require special handling for two reasons.  First,
      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+
experience shows that triggered updates can cause excessive loads on
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
+
networks with limited capacity or with many gateways on them.  Thus
      | command (1)  | version (1)  |      must be zero (2)        |
+
the protocol requires that implementors include provisions to limit
      +---------------+---------------+-------------------------------+
+
the frequency of triggered updates.  After a triggered update is
      | address family identifier (2) |      must be zero (2)        |
+
sent, a timer should be set for a random time between 1 and 5
      +-------------------------------+-------------------------------+
+
seconds. If other changes that would trigger updates occur before
      |                        IP address (4)                        |
+
the timer expires, a single update is triggered when the timer
      +---------------------------------------------------------------+
+
expires, and the timer is then set to another random value between 1
      |                        must be zero (4)                      |
+
and 5 secondsTriggered updates may be suppressed if a regular
      +---------------------------------------------------------------+
+
update is due by the time the triggered update would be sent.
      |                        must be zero (4)                      |
 
      +---------------------------------------------------------------+
 
      |                          metric (4)                          |
 
      +---------------------------------------------------------------+
 
                                      .
 
                                      .
 
                                      .
 
      The portion of the datagram from address family identifier through
 
      metric may appear up to 25 timesIP address is the usual 4-octet
 
      Internet address, in network order.
 
  
                          Figure 1.   Packet format
+
Second, triggered updates do not need to include the entire routing
 +
table.  In principle, only those routes that have changed need to be
 +
included.  Thus messages generated as part of a triggered update must
 +
include at least those routes that have their route change flag set.
 +
They may include additional routes, or all routes, at the discretion
 +
of the implementor; however, when full routing updates require
 +
multiple packets, sending all routes is strongly discouraged.  When a
 +
triggered update is processed, messages should be generated for every
 +
directly-connected network.  Split horizon processing is done when
 +
generating triggered updates as well as normal updates (see below).
  
  Every datagram contains a command, a version number, and possible
+
If, after split horizon processing, a changed route will appear
  argumentsThis document describes version 1 of the protocol.
+
identical on a network as it did previously, the route need not be
  Details of processing the version number are described in section
+
sent; if, as a result, no routes need be sent, the update may be
  3.4.  The command field is used to specify the purpose of this
+
omitted on that network(If a route had only a metric change, or
  datagramHere is a summary of the commands implemented in version
+
uses a new gateway that is on the same network as the old gateway,
  1:
+
the route will be sent to the network of the old gateway with a
 +
metric of infinity both before and after the change.) Once all of
 +
the triggered updates have been generated, the route change flags
 +
should be cleared.
  
  1 - request    A request for the responding system to send all or
+
If input processing is allowed while output is being generated,
                  part of its routing table.
+
appropriate interlocking must be done.  The route change flags should
 +
not be changed as a result of processing input while a triggered
 +
update message is being generated.
  
  2 - response    A message containing all or part of the sender's
+
The only difference between a triggered update and other update
                  routing table. This message may be sent in response
+
messages is the possible omission of routes that have not changed.
                  to a request or poll, or it may be an update message
+
The rest of the mechanisms about to be described must all apply to
                  generated by the sender.
+
triggered updates.
  
  3 - traceon    Obsolete.  Messages containing this command are to be
+
Here is how a response datagram is generated for a particular
                  ignored.
+
directly-connected network:
  
 +
The IP source address must be the sending host's address on that
 +
network.  This is important because the source address is put into
 +
routing tables in other hosts.  If an incorrect source address is
 +
used, other hosts may be unable to route datagrams.  Sometimes
 +
gateways are set up with multiple IP addresses on a single physical
 +
interface.  Normally, this means that several logical IP networks are
 +
being carried over one physical medium.  In such cases, a separate
 +
update message must be sent for each address, with that address as
 +
the IP source address.
  
 +
Set the version number to the current version of RIP.  (The version
 +
described in this document is 1.)  Set the command to response.  Set
 +
the bytes labeled "must be zero" to zero.  Now start filling in
 +
entries.
  
Hedrick                                                        [Page 19]
+
To fill in the entries, go down all the routes in the internal
 +
routing table.  Recall that the maximum datagram size is 512 bytes.
 +
When there is no more space in the datagram, send the current message
 +
and start a new one.  If a triggered update is being generated, only
 +
entries whose route change flags are set need be included.
  
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
+
See the description in Section 3.2 for a discussion of problems
 +
raised by subnet and host routes.  Routes to subnets will be
 +
meaningless outside the network, and must be omitted if the
 +
destination is not on the same subnetted network; they should be
  
 +
replaced with a single route to the network of which the subnets are
 +
a part.  Similarly, routes to hosts must be eliminated if they are
 +
subsumed by a network route, as described in the discussion in
 +
Section 3.2.
  
  4 - traceoff    ObsoleteMessages containing this command are to be
+
If the route passes these tests, then the destination and metric are
                  ignored.
+
put into the entry in the output datagramRoutes must be included
 +
in the datagram even if their metrics are infinite.  If the gateway
 +
for the route is on the network for which the datagram is being
 +
prepared, the metric in the entry is set to 16, or the entire entry
 +
is omitted.  Omitting the entry is simple split horizon.  Including
 +
an entry with metric 16 is split horizon with poisoned reverse.  See
 +
Section 2.2 for a more complete discussion of these alternatives.
  
  5 - reserved    This value is used by Sun Microsystems for its own
+
=== Compatibility ===
                  purposes.  If new commands are added in any
 
                  succeeding version, they should begin with 6.
 
                  Messages containing this command may safely be
 
                  ignored by implementations that do not choose to
 
                  respond to it.
 
  
  For request and response, the rest of the datagram contains a list of
+
The protocol described in this document is intended to interoperate
  destinations, with information about each.  Each entry in this list
+
with routed and other existing implementations of RIPHowever, a
  contains a destination network or host, and the metric for itThe
+
different viewpoint is adopted about when to increment the metric
  packet format is intended to allow RIP to carry routing information
+
than was used in most previous implementationsUsing the previous
  for several different protocolsThus, each entry has an address
+
perspective, the internal routing table has a metric of 0 for all
  family identifier to indicate what type of address is specified in
+
directly-connected networks.  The cost (which is always 1) is added
  that entry.  This document only describes routing for Internet
+
to the metric when the route is sent in an update messageBy
  networks.  The address family identifier for IP is 2.  None of the
+
contrast, in this document directly-connected networks appear in the
  RIP implementations available to the author implement any other type
+
internal routing table with metrics equal to their costs; the metrics
  of addressHowever, to allow for future development,
+
are not necessarily 1In this document, the cost is added to the
  implementations are required to skip entries that specify address
+
metrics when routes are received in update messagesMetrics from
  families that are not supported by the implementation(The size of
+
the routing table are sent in update messages without change (unless
  these entries will be the same as the size of an entry specifying an
+
modified by split horizon).
  IP address.) Processing of the message continues normally after any
 
  unsupported entries are skipped.  The IP address is the usual
 
  Internet address, stored as 4 octets in network orderThe metric
 
  field must contain a value between 1 and 15 inclusive, specifying the
 
  current metric for the destination, or the value 16, which indicates
 
  that the destination is not reachable.  Each route sent by a gateway
 
  supercedes any previous route to the same destination from the same
 
  gateway.
 
  
  The maximum datagram size is 512 octets. This includes only the
+
These two viewpoints result in identical update messages being sent.
  portions of the datagram described aboveIt does not count the IP
+
Metrics in the routing table differ by a constant one in the two
  or UDP headers.  The commands that involve network information allow
+
descriptionsThus, there is no difference in effect.  The change
  information to be split across several datagrams.  No special
+
was made because the new description makes it easier to handle
  provisions are needed for continuations, since correct results will
+
situations where different metrics are used on directly-attached
  occur if the datagrams are processed individually.
+
networks.
  
3.2. Addressing considerations
+
Implementations that only support network costs of one need not
 +
change to match the new style of presentation. However, they must
 +
follow the description given in this document in all other ways.
  
  As indicated in section 2, distance vector routing can be used to
+
== Control functions ==
  describe routes to individual hosts or to networks.  The RIP protocol
 
  allows either of these possibilities.  The destinations appearing in
 
  request and response messages can be networks, hosts, or a special
 
  code used to indicate a default address.  In general, the kinds of
 
  routes actually used will depend upon the routing strategy used for
 
  the particular network.  Many networks are set up so that routing
 
  
 +
This section describes administrative controls.  These are not part
 +
of the protocol per se.  However, experience with existing networks
 +
suggests that they are important.  Because they are not a necessary
 +
part of the protocol, they are considered optional.  However, we
 +
strongly recommend that at least some of them be included in every
  
 +
implementation.
  
Hedrick                                                        [Page 20]
+
These controls are intended primarily to allow RIP to be connected to
 +
networks whose routing may be unstable or subject to errors.  Here
 +
are some examples:
  
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
+
It is sometimes desirable to limit the hosts and gateways from which
 +
information will be accepted.  On occasion, hosts have been
 +
misconfigured in such a way that they begin sending inappropriate
 +
information.
  
 +
A number of sites limit the set of networks that they allow in update
 +
messages.  Organization A may have a connection to organization B
 +
that they use for direct communication.  For security or performance
 +
reasons A may not be willing to give other organizations access to
 +
that connection.  In such cases, A should not include B's networks in
 +
updates that A sends to third parties.
  
  information for individual hosts is not neededIf every host on a
+
Here are some typical controlsNote, however, that the RIP protocol
  given network or subnet is accessible through the same gateways, then
+
does not require these or any other controls.
  there is no reason to mention individual hosts in the routing tables.
 
  However, networks that include point to point lines sometimes require
 
  gateways to keep track of routes to certain hosts.  Whether this
 
  feature is required depends upon the addressing and routing approach
 
  used in the system.  Thus, some implementations may choose not to
 
  support host routes.  If host routes are not supported, they are to
 
  be dropped when they are received in response messages.  (See section
 
  3.4.2.)
 
  
   The RIP packet formats do not distinguish among various types of
+
   - a neighbor list - the network administrator should be able
  addressFields that are labeled "address" can contain any of the
+
    to define a list of neighbors for each hostA host would
  following:
+
    accept response messages only from hosts on its list of
 +
    neighbors.
  
      host address
+
   - allowing or disallowing specific destinations - the network
      subnet number
+
    administrator should be able to specify a list of
      network number
+
    destination addresses to allow or disallow.  The list would
      0, indicating a default route
+
    be associated with a particular interface in the incoming
 
+
    or outgoing direction.  Only allowed networks would be
  Entities that use RIP are assumed to use the most specific
+
    mentioned in response messages going out or processed in
  information available when routing a datagram.  That is, when routing
+
    response messages coming in.  If a list of allowed
  a datagram, its destination address must first be checked against the
+
    addresses is specified, all other addresses are disallowed.
  list of host addresses.  Then it must be checked to see whether it
+
    If a list of disallowed addresses is specified, all other
  matches any known subnet or network number.  Finally, if none of
+
    addresses are allowed.
  these match, the default route is used.
 
 
 
  When a host evaluates information that it receives via RIP, its
 
  interpretation of an address depends upon whether it knows the subnet
 
  mask that applies to the net.  If so, then it is possible to
 
  determine the meaning of the address.  For example, consider net
 
  128.6.  It has a subnet mask of 255.255.255.0.  Thus 128.6.0.0 is a
 
  network number, 128.6.4.0 is a subnet number, and 128.6.4.1 is a host
 
  address.  However, if the host does not know the subnet mask,
 
  evaluation of an address may be ambiguous.  If there is a non-zero
 
  host part, there is no clear way to determine whether the address
 
  represents a subnet number or a host address.  As a subnet number
 
  would be useless without the subnet mask, addresses are assumed to
 
  represent hosts in this situation.  In order to avoid this sort of
 
  ambiguity, hosts must not send subnet routes to hosts that cannot be
 
  expected to know the appropriate subnet mask.  Normally hosts only
 
  know the subnet masks for directly-connected networks.  Therefore,
 
  unless special provisions have been made, routes to a subnet must not
 
  be sent outside the network of which the subnet is a part.
 
 
 
  This filtering is carried out by the gateways at the "border" of the
 
  subnetted network.  These are gateways that connect that network with
 
  some other network.  Within the subnetted network, each subnet is
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Hedrick                                                        [Page 21]
 
 
 
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
 
 
 
 
 
  treated as an individual network.  Routing entries for each subnet
 
  are circulated by RIP.  However, border gateways send only a single
 
  entry for the network as a whole to hosts in other networks.  This
 
  means that a border gateway will send different information to
 
  different neighbors.  For neighbors connected to the subnetted
 
  network, it generates a list of all subnets to which it is directly
 
  connected, using the subnet number.  For neighbors connected to other
 
  networks, it makes a single entry for the network as a whole, showing
 
  the metric associated with that network.  (This metric would normally
 
  be the smallest metric for the subnets to which the gateway is
 
  attached.)
 
 
 
  Similarly, border gateways must not mention host routes for hosts
 
  within one of the directly-connected networks in messages to other
 
  networks.  Those routes will be subsumed by the single entry for the
 
  network as a whole.  We do not specify what to do with host routes
 
  for "distant" hosts (i.e., hosts not part of one of the directly-
 
  connected networks).  Generally, these routes indicate some host that
 
  is reachable via a route that does not support other hosts on the
 
  network of which the host is a part.
 
 
 
  The special address 0.0.0.0 is used to describe a default route.  A
 
  default route is used when it is not convenient to list every
 
  possible network in the RIP updates, and when one or more closely-
 
  connected gateways in the system are prepared to handle traffic to
 
  the networks that are not listed explicitly.  These gateways should
 
  create RIP entries for the address 0.0.0.0, just as if it were a
 
  network to which they are connected.  The decision as to how gateways
 
  create entries for 0.0.0.0 is left to the implementor.  Most
 
  commonly, the system administrator will be provided with a way to
 
  specify which gateways should create entries for 0.0.0.0.  However,
 
  other mechanisms are possible.  For example, an implementor might
 
  decide that any gateway that speaks EGP should be declared to be a
 
  default gateway.  It may be useful to allow the network administrator
 
  to choose the metric to be used in these entries.  If there is more
 
  than one default gateway, this will make it possible to express a
 
  preference for one over the other.  The entries for 0.0.0.0 are
 
  handled by RIP in exactly the same manner as if there were an actual
 
  network with this address.  However, the entry is used to route any
 
  datagram whose destination address does not match any other network
 
  in the table.  Implementations are not required to support this
 
  convention.  However, it is strongly recommended.  Implementations
 
  that do not support 0.0.0.0 must ignore entries with this address.
 
  In such cases, they must not pass the entry on in their own RIP
 
  updates.  System administrators should take care to make sure that
 
  routes to 0.0.0.0 do not propagate further than is intended.
 
  Generally, each autonomous system has its own preferred default
 
  gateway.  Thus, routes involving 0.0.0.0 should generally not leave
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Hedrick                                                        [Page 22]
 
 
 
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
 
 
 
 
 
  the boundary of an autonomous system.  The mechanisms for enforcing
 
  this are not specified in this document.
 
 
 
3.3. Timers
 
 
 
  This section describes all events that are triggered by timers.
 
 
 
  Every 30 seconds, the output process is instructed to generate a
 
  complete response to every neighboring gateway.  When there are many
 
  gateways on a single network, there is a tendency for them to
 
  synchronize with each other such that they all issue updates at the
 
  same time.  This can happen whenever the 30 second timer is affected
 
  by the processing load on the system.  It is undesirable for the
 
  update messages to become synchronized, since it can lead to
 
  unnecessary collisions on broadcast networks.  Thus, implementations
 
  are required to take one of two precautions.
 
 
 
      - The 30-second updates are triggered by a clock whose rate
 
        is not affected by system load or the time required to
 
        service the previous update timer.
 
 
 
      - The 30-second timer is offset by addition of a small random
 
        time each time it is set.
 
 
 
  There are two timers associated with each route, a "timeout" and a
 
  "garbage-collection time".  Upon expiration of the timeout, the route
 
  is no longer valid.  However, it is retained in the table for a short
 
  time, so that neighbors can be notified that the route has been
 
  dropped.  Upon expiration of the garbage-collection timer, the route
 
  is finally removed from the tables.
 
 
 
  The timeout is initialized when a route is established, and any time
 
  an update message is received for the route.  If 180 seconds elapse
 
  from the last time the timeout was initialized, the route is
 
  considered to have expired, and the deletion process which we are
 
  about to describe is started for it.
 
 
 
  Deletions can occur for one of two reasons: (1) the timeout expires,
 
  or (2) the metric is set to 16 because of an update received from the
 
  current gateway.  (See section 3.4.2 for a discussion processing
 
  updates from other gateways.)  In either case, the following events
 
  happen:
 
 
 
      - The garbage-collection timer is set for 120 seconds.
 
 
 
      - The metric for the route is set to 16 (infinity).  This
 
        causes the route to be removed from service.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Hedrick                                                        [Page 23]
 
 
 
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
 
 
 
 
 
      - A flag is set noting that this entry has been changed, and
 
        the output process is signalled to trigger a response.
 
 
 
  Until the garbage-collection timer expires, the route is included in
 
  all updates sent by this host, with a metric of 16 (infinity).  When
 
  the garbage-collection timer expires, the route is deleted from the
 
  tables.
 
 
 
  Should a new route to this network be established while the garbage-
 
  collection timer is running, the new route will replace the one that
 
  is about to be deleted.  In this case the garbage-collection timer
 
  must be cleared.
 
 
 
  See section 3.5 for a discussion of a delay that is required in
 
  carrying out triggered updates.  Although implementation of that
 
  delay will require a timer, it is more natural to discuss it in
 
  section 3.5 than here.
 
 
 
3.4. Input processing
 
 
 
  This section will describe the handling of datagrams received on UDP
 
  port 520.  Before processing the datagrams in detail, certain general
 
  format checks must be made.  These depend upon the version number
 
  field in the datagram, as follows:
 
 
 
      0  Datagrams whose version number is zero are to be ignored.
 
          These are from a previous version of the protocol, whose
 
          packet format was machine-specific.
 
 
 
      1  Datagrams whose version number is one are to be processed
 
          as described in the rest of this specification.  All fields
 
          that are described above as "must be zero" are to be checked.
 
          If any such field contains a non-zero value, the entire
 
          message is to be ignored.
 
 
 
      >1  Datagrams whose version number are greater than one are
 
          to be processed as described in the rest of this
 
          specification.  All fields that are described above as
 
          "must be zero" are to be ignored.  Future versions of the
 
          protocol may put data into these fields.  Version 1
 
          implementations are to ignore this extra data and process
 
          only the fields specified in this document.
 
 
 
  After checking the version number and doing any other preliminary
 
  checks, processing will depend upon the value in the command field.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Hedrick                                                        [Page 24]
 
 
 
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
 
 
 
 
 
3.4.1. Request
 
 
 
  Request is used to ask for a response containing all or part of the
 
  host's routing table.  [Note that the term host is used for either
 
  host or gateway, in most cases it would be unusual for a non-gateway
 
  host to send RIP messages.]  Normally, requests are sent as
 
  broadcasts, from a UDP source port of 520.  In this case, silent
 
  processes do not respond to the request.  Silent processes are by
 
  definition processes for which we normally do not want to see routing
 
  information.  However, there may be situations involving gateway
 
  monitoring where it is desired to look at the routing table even for
 
  a silent process.  In this case, the request should be sent from a
 
  UDP port number other than 520.  If a request comes from port 520,
 
  silent processes do not respond.  If the request comes from any other
 
  port, processes must respond even if they are silent.
 
 
 
  The request is processed entry by entry.  If there are no entries, no
 
  response is given.  There is one special case.  If there is exactly
 
  one entry in the request, with an address family identifier of 0
 
  (meaning unspecified), and a metric of infinity (i.e., 16 for current
 
  implementations), this is a request to send the entire routing table.
 
  In that case, a call is made to the output process to send the
 
  routing table to the requesting port.
 
 
 
  Except for this special case, processing is quite simple.  Go down
 
  the list of entries in the request one by one.  For each entry, look
 
  up the destination in the host's routing database.  If there is a
 
  route, put that route's metric in the metric field in the datagram.
 
  If there isn't a route to the specified destination, put infinity
 
  (i.e., 16) in the metric field in the datagram.  Once all the entries
 
  have been filled in, set the command to response and send the
 
  datagram back to the port from which it came.
 
 
 
  Note that there is a difference in handling depending upon whether
 
  the request is for a specified set of destinations, or for a complete
 
  routing table.  If the request is for a complete host table, normal
 
  output processing is done.  This includes split horizon (see section
 
  2.2.1) and subnet hiding (section 3.2), so that certain entries from
 
  the routing table will not be shown.  If the request is for specific
 
  entries, they are looked up in the host table and the information is
 
  returned.  No split horizon processing is done, and subnets are
 
  returned if requested.  We anticipate that these requests are likely
 
  to be used for different purposes.  When a host first comes up, it
 
  broadcasts requests on every connected network asking for a complete
 
  routing table.  In general, we assume that complete routing tables
 
  are likely to be used to update another host's routing table.  For
 
  this reason, split horizon and all other filtering must be used.
 
  Requests for specific networks are made only by diagnostic software,
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Hedrick                                                        [Page 25]
 
 
 
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
 
 
 
 
 
  and are not used for routing.  In this case, the requester would want
 
  to know the exact contents of the routing database, and would not
 
  want any information hidden.
 
 
 
3.4.2. Response
 
 
 
  Responses can be received for several different reasons:
 
 
 
      response to a specific query
 
      regular updates
 
      triggered updates triggered by a metric change
 
 
 
  Processing is the same no matter how responses were generated.
 
 
 
  Because processing of a response may update the host's routing table,
 
  the response must be checked carefully for validity.  The response
 
  must be ignored if it is not from port 520.  The IP source address
 
  should be checked to see whether the datagram is from a valid
 
  neighbor.  The source of the datagram must be on a directly-connected
 
  network.  It is also worth checking to see whether the response is
 
  from one of the host's own addresses.  Interfaces on broadcast
 
  networks may receive copies of their own broadcasts immediately.  If
 
  a host processes its own output as new input, confusion is likely,
 
  and such datagrams must be ignored (except as discussed in the next
 
  paragraph).
 
 
 
  Before actually processing a response, it may be useful to use its
 
  presence as input to a process for keeping track of interface status.
 
  As mentioned above, we time out a route when we haven't heard from
 
  its gateway for a certain amount of time.  This works fine for routes
 
  that come from another gateway.  It is also desirable to know when
 
  one of our own directly-connected networks has failed.  This document
 
  does not specify any particular method for doing this, as such
 
  methods depend upon the characteristics of the network and the
 
  hardware interface to it.  However, such methods often involve
 
  listening for datagrams arriving on the interface.  Arriving
 
  datagrams can be used as an indication that the interface is working.
 
  However, some caution must be used, as it is possible for interfaces
 
  to fail in such a way that input datagrams are received, but output
 
  datagrams are never sent successfully.
 
 
 
  Now that the datagram as a whole has been validated, process the
 
  entries in it one by one.  Again, start by doing validation.  If the
 
  metric is greater than infinity, ignore the entry.  (This should be
 
  impossible, if the other host is working correctly.  Incorrect
 
  metrics and other format errors should probably cause alerts or be
 
  logged.)  Then look at the destination address.  Check the address
 
  family identifier.  If it is not a value which is expected (e.g., 2
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Hedrick                                                        [Page 26]
 
 
 
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
 
 
 
 
 
  for Internet addresses), ignore the entry.  Now check the address
 
  itself for various kinds of inappropriate addresses.  Ignore the
 
  entry if the address is class D or E, if it is on net 0 (except for
 
  0.0.0.0, if we accept default routes) or if it is on net 127 (the
 
  loopback network).  Also, test for a broadcast address, i.e.,
 
  anything whose host part is all ones on a network that supports
 
  broadcast, and ignore any such entry.  If the implementor has chosen
 
  not to support host routes (see section 3.2), check to see whether
 
  the host portion of the address is non-zero; if so, ignore the entry.
 
 
 
  Recall that the address field contains a number of unused octets.  If
 
  the version number of the datagram is 1, they must also be checked.
 
  If any of them is nonzero, the entry is to be ignored.  (Many of
 
  these cases indicate that the host from which the message came is not
 
  working correctly.  Thus some form of error logging or alert should
 
  be triggered.)
 
 
 
  Update the metric by adding the cost of the network on which the
 
  message arrived.  If the result is greater than 16, use 16.  That is,
 
 
 
      metric = MIN (metric + cost, 16)
 
 
 
  Now look up the address to see whether this is already a route for
 
  it.  In general, if not, we want to add one.  However, there are
 
  various exceptions.  If the metric is infinite, don't add an entry.
 
  (We would update an existing one, but we don't add new entries with
 
  infinite metric.)  We want to avoid adding routes to hosts if the
 
  host is part of a net or subnet for which we have at least as good a
 
  route.  If neither of these exceptions applies, add a new entry to
 
  the routing database.  This includes the following actions:
 
 
 
      - Set the destination and metric to those from the datagram.
 
 
 
      - Set the gateway to be the host from which the datagram
 
        came.
 
 
 
      - Initialize the timeout for the route. If the garbage-
 
        collection timer is running for this route, stop it. (See
 
        section 3.3 for a discussion of the timers.)
 
 
 
      - Set the route change flag, and signal the output process to
 
        trigger an update (see 3.5).
 
 
 
  If there is an existing route, first compare gateways.  If this
 
  datagram is from the same gateway as the existing route, reinitialize
 
  the timeout.  Next compare metrics.  If the datagram is from the same
 
  gateway as the existing route and the new metric is different than
 
  the old one, or if the new metric is lower than the old one, do the
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Hedrick                                                        [Page 27]
 
 
 
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
 
 
 
 
 
  following actions:
 
 
 
      - adopt the route from the datagram.  That is, put the new
 
        metric in, and set the gateway to be the host from which
 
        the datagram came.
 
 
 
      - Initialize the timeout for the route.
 
 
 
      - Set the route change flag, and signal the output process to
 
        trigger an update (see 3.5).
 
 
 
      - If the new metric is 16 (infinity), the deletion process is
 
        started.
 
 
 
  If the new metric is 16 (infinity), this starts the process for
 
  deleting the route.  The route is no longer used for routing packets,
 
  and the deletion timer is started (see section 3.3).  Note that a
 
  deletion is started only when the metric is first set to 16.  If the
 
  metric was already 16, then a new deletion is not started.  (Starting
 
  a deletion sets a timer.  The concern is that we do not want to reset
 
  the timer every 30 seconds, as new messages arrive with an infinite
 
  metric.)
 
 
 
  If the new metric is the same as the old one, it is simplest to do
 
  nothing further (beyond reinitializing the timeout, as specified
 
  above).  However, the 4BSD routed uses an additional heuristic here.
 
  Normally, it is senseless to change to a route with the same metric
 
  as the existing route but a different gateway.  If the existing route
 
  is showing signs of timing out, though, it may be better to switch to
 
  an equally-good alternative route immediately, rather than waiting
 
  for the timeout to happen.  (See section 3.3 for a discussion of
 
  timeouts.)  Therefore, if the new metric is the same as the old one,
 
  routed looks at the timeout for the existing route.  If it is at
 
  least halfway to the expiration point, routed switches to the new
 
  route.  That is, the gateway is changed to the source of the current
 
  message.  This heuristic is optional.
 
 
 
  Any entry that fails these tests is ignored, as it is no better than
 
  the current route.
 
 
 
3.5. Output Processing
 
 
 
  This section describes the processing used to create response
 
  messages that contain all or part of the routing table.  This
 
  processing may be triggered in any of the following ways:
 
 
 
      - by input processing when a request is seen.  In this case,
 
        the resulting message is sent to only one destination.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Hedrick                                                        [Page 28]
 
 
 
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
 
 
 
 
 
      - by the regular routing update.  Every 30 seconds, a
 
        response containing the whole routing table is sent to
 
        every neighboring gateway.  (See section 3.3.)
 
 
 
      - by triggered updates.  Whenever the metric for a route is
 
        changed, an update is triggered.  (The update may be
 
        delayed; see below.)
 
 
 
  Before describing the way a message is generated for each directly-
 
   connected network, we will comment on how the destinations are chosen
 
  for the latter two cases.  Normally, when a response is to be sent to
 
  all destinations (that is, either the regular update or a triggered
 
  update is being prepared), a response is sent to the host at the
 
  opposite end of each connected point-to-point link, and a response is
 
  broadcast on all connected networks that support broadcasting.  Thus,
 
  one response is prepared for each directly-connected network and sent
 
  to the corresponding (destination or broadcast) address.  In most
 
  cases, this reaches all neighboring gateways.  However, there are
 
  some cases where this may not be good enough.  This may involve a
 
  network that does not support broadcast (e.g., the ARPANET), or a
 
  situation involving dumb gateways.  In such cases, it may be
 
  necessary to specify an actual list of neighboring hosts and
 
  gateways, and send a datagram to each one explicitly.  It is left to
 
  the implementor to determine whether such a mechanism is needed, and
 
  to define how the list is specified.
 
 
 
  Triggered updates require special handling for two reasons.  First,
 
  experience shows that triggered updates can cause excessive loads on
 
  networks with limited capacity or with many gateways on them.  Thus
 
  the protocol requires that implementors include provisions to limit
 
  the frequency of triggered updates.  After a triggered update is
 
  sent, a timer should be set for a random time between 1 and 5
 
  seconds.  If other changes that would trigger updates occur before
 
  the timer expires, a single update is triggered when the timer
 
  expires, and the timer is then set to another random value between 1
 
  and 5 seconds.  Triggered updates may be suppressed if a regular
 
  update is due by the time the triggered update would be sent.
 
 
 
  Second, triggered updates do not need to include the entire routing
 
  table.  In principle, only those routes that have changed need to be
 
  included.  Thus messages generated as part of a triggered update must
 
  include at least those routes that have their route change flag set.
 
  They may include additional routes, or all routes, at the discretion
 
  of the implementor; however, when full routing updates require
 
  multiple packets, sending all routes is strongly discouraged.  When a
 
  triggered update is processed, messages should be generated for every
 
  directly-connected network.  Split horizon processing is done when
 
  generating triggered updates as well as normal updates (see below).
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Hedrick                                                        [Page 29]
 
 
 
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
 
 
 
 
 
  If, after split horizon processing, a changed route will appear
 
  identical on a network as it did previously, the route need not be
 
  sent; if, as a result, no routes need be sent, the update may be
 
  omitted on that network.  (If a route had only a metric change, or
 
  uses a new gateway that is on the same network as the old gateway,
 
  the route will be sent to the network of the old gateway with a
 
  metric of infinity both before and after the change.)  Once all of
 
  the triggered updates have been generated, the route change flags
 
  should be cleared.
 
 
 
  If input processing is allowed while output is being generated,
 
  appropriate interlocking must be done.  The route change flags should
 
  not be changed as a result of processing input while a triggered
 
  update message is being generated.
 
 
 
  The only difference between a triggered update and other update
 
  messages is the possible omission of routes that have not changed.
 
  The rest of the mechanisms about to be described must all apply to
 
  triggered updates.
 
 
 
  Here is how a response datagram is generated for a particular
 
  directly-connected network:
 
 
 
  The IP source address must be the sending host's address on that
 
  network.  This is important because the source address is put into
 
  routing tables in other hosts.  If an incorrect source address is
 
  used, other hosts may be unable to route datagrams.  Sometimes
 
  gateways are set up with multiple IP addresses on a single physical
 
  interface.  Normally, this means that several logical IP networks are
 
  being carried over one physical medium.  In such cases, a separate
 
  update message must be sent for each address, with that address as
 
  the IP source address.
 
 
 
  Set the version number to the current version of RIP.  (The version
 
  described in this document is 1.)  Set the command to response.  Set
 
  the bytes labeled "must be zero" to zero.  Now start filling in
 
  entries.
 
 
 
  To fill in the entries, go down all the routes in the internal
 
  routing table.  Recall that the maximum datagram size is 512 bytes.
 
  When there is no more space in the datagram, send the current message
 
  and start a new one.  If a triggered update is being generated, only
 
  entries whose route change flags are set need be included.
 
 
 
  See the description in Section 3.2 for a discussion of problems
 
  raised by subnet and host routes.  Routes to subnets will be
 
  meaningless outside the network, and must be omitted if the
 
  destination is not on the same subnetted network; they should be
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Hedrick                                                        [Page 30]
 
 
 
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
 
 
 
 
 
  replaced with a single route to the network of which the subnets are
 
  a part.  Similarly, routes to hosts must be eliminated if they are
 
  subsumed by a network route, as described in the discussion in
 
  Section 3.2.
 
 
 
  If the route passes these tests, then the destination and metric are
 
  put into the entry in the output datagram.  Routes must be included
 
  in the datagram even if their metrics are infinite.  If the gateway
 
  for the route is on the network for which the datagram is being
 
  prepared, the metric in the entry is set to 16, or the entire entry
 
  is omitted.  Omitting the entry is simple split horizon.  Including
 
  an entry with metric 16 is split horizon with poisoned reverse.  See
 
  Section 2.2 for a more complete discussion of these alternatives.
 
 
 
3.6. Compatibility
 
 
 
  The protocol described in this document is intended to interoperate
 
  with routed and other existing implementations of RIP.  However, a
 
  different viewpoint is adopted about when to increment the metric
 
  than was used in most previous implementations.  Using the previous
 
  perspective, the internal routing table has a metric of 0 for all
 
  directly-connected networks.  The cost (which is always 1) is added
 
  to the metric when the route is sent in an update message.  By
 
  contrast, in this document directly-connected networks appear in the
 
  internal routing table with metrics equal to their costs; the metrics
 
  are not necessarily 1.  In this document, the cost is added to the
 
  metrics when routes are received in update messages.  Metrics from
 
  the routing table are sent in update messages without change (unless
 
  modified by split horizon).
 
 
 
  These two viewpoints result in identical update messages being sent.
 
  Metrics in the routing table differ by a constant one in the two
 
  descriptions.  Thus, there is no difference in effect.  The change
 
  was made because the new description makes it easier to handle
 
  situations where different metrics are used on directly-attached
 
  networks.
 
 
 
  Implementations that only support network costs of one need not
 
  change to match the new style of presentation.  However, they must
 
  follow the description given in this document in all other ways.
 
 
 
4. Control functions
 
 
 
  This section describes administrative controls.  These are not part
 
  of the protocol per se.  However, experience with existing networks
 
  suggests that they are important.  Because they are not a necessary
 
  part of the protocol, they are considered optional.  However, we
 
  strongly recommend that at least some of them be included in every
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Hedrick                                                        [Page 31]
 
 
 
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
 
 
 
 
 
  implementation.
 
 
 
  These controls are intended primarily to allow RIP to be connected to
 
  networks whose routing may be unstable or subject to errors.  Here
 
  are some examples:
 
 
 
  It is sometimes desirable to limit the hosts and gateways from which
 
  information will be accepted.  On occasion, hosts have been
 
  misconfigured in such a way that they begin sending inappropriate
 
  information.
 
 
 
  A number of sites limit the set of networks that they allow in update
 
  messages.  Organization A may have a connection to organization B
 
  that they use for direct communication.  For security or performance
 
  reasons A may not be willing to give other organizations access to
 
  that connection.  In such cases, A should not include B's networks in
 
  updates that A sends to third parties.
 
 
 
  Here are some typical controls.  Note, however, that the RIP protocol
 
  does not require these or any other controls.
 
 
 
      - a neighbor list - the network administrator should be able
 
        to define a list of neighbors for each host.  A host would
 
        accept response messages only from hosts on its list of
 
        neighbors.
 
 
 
      - allowing or disallowing specific destinations - the network
 
        administrator should be able to specify a list of
 
        destination addresses to allow or disallow.  The list would
 
        be associated with a particular interface in the incoming
 
        or outgoing direction.  Only allowed networks would be
 
        mentioned in response messages going out or processed in
 
        response messages coming in.  If a list of allowed
 
        addresses is specified, all other addresses are disallowed.
 
        If a list of disallowed addresses is specified, all other
 
        addresses are allowed.
 
  
 
REFERENCES and BIBLIOGRAPHY
 
REFERENCES and BIBLIOGRAPHY
  
  [1] Bellman, R. E., "Dynamic Programming", Princeton University
+
[1] Bellman, R. E., "Dynamic Programming", Princeton University
      Press, Princeton, N.J., 1957.
+
    Press, Princeton, N.J., 1957.
 
 
  [2] Bertsekas, D. P., and Gallaher, R. G., "Data Networks",
 
      Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N.J., 1987.
 
 
 
  [3] Braden, R., and Postel, J., "Requirements for Internet Gateways",
 
      USC/Information Sciences Institute, RFC-1009, June 1987.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Hedrick                                                        [Page 32]
 
 
 
RFC 1058              Routing Information Protocol            June 1988
 
 
 
 
 
  [4] Boggs, D. R., Shoch, J. F., Taft, E. A., and Metcalfe, R. M.,
 
      "Pup: An Internetwork Architecture", IEEE Transactions on
 
      Communications, April 1980.
 
 
 
  [5] Clark, D. D., "Fault Isolation and Recovery," MIT-LCS, RFC-816,
 
      July 1982.
 
 
 
  [6] Ford, L. R. Jr., and Fulkerson, D. R., "Flows in Networks",
 
      Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J., 1962.
 
 
 
  [7] Xerox Corp., "Internet Transport Protocols", Xerox System
 
      Integration Standard XSIS 028112, December 1981.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 +
[2] Bertsekas, D. P., and Gallaher, R. G., "Data Networks",
 +
    Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N.J., 1987.
  
 +
[3] Braden, R., and Postel, J., "Requirements for Internet Gateways",
 +
    USC/Information Sciences Institute, RFC-1009, June 1987.
  
 +
[4] Boggs, D. R., Shoch, J. F., Taft, E. A., and Metcalfe, R. M.,
 +
    "Pup: An Internetwork Architecture", IEEE Transactions on
 +
    Communications, April 1980.
  
 +
[5] Clark, D. D., "Fault Isolation and Recovery," MIT-LCS, RFC-816,
 +
    July 1982.
  
 +
[6] Ford, L. R. Jr., and Fulkerson, D. R., "Flows in Networks",
 +
    Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J., 1962.
  
Hedrick                                                        [Page 33]
+
[7] Xerox Corp., "Internet Transport Protocols", Xerox System
 +
    Integration Standard XSIS 028112, December 1981.

Latest revision as of 20:55, 14 October 2020

Network Working Group C. Hedrick Request for Comments: 1058 Rutgers University

                                                           June 1988
                  Routing Information Protocol

Status of this Memo

This RFC describes an existing protocol for exchanging routing information among gateways and other hosts. It is intended to be used as a basis for developing gateway software for use in the Internet community. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

                         Table of Contents

1. Introduction 2

    1.1. Limitations of the protocol                               4
    1.2. Organization of this document                             4

2. Distance Vector Algorithms 5

    2.1. Dealing with changes in topology                         11
    2.2. Preventing instability                                   12
         2.2.1. Split horizon                                     14
         2.2.2. Triggered updates                                 15

3. Specifications for the protocol 16

    3.1. Message formats                                          18
    3.2. Addressing considerations                                20
    3.3. Timers                                                   23
    3.4. Input processing                                         24
         3.4.1. Request                                           25
         3.4.2. Response                                          26
    3.5. Output Processing                                        28
    3.6. Compatibility                                            31

4. Control functions 31

Overview

This memo is intended to do the following things:

  - Document a protocol and algorithms that are currently in
    wide use for routing, but which have never been formally
    documented.
  - Specify some improvements in the algorithms which will
    improve stability of the routes in large networks.  These
    improvements do not introduce any incompatibility with
    existing implementations.  They are to be incorporated into
    all implementations of this protocol.
  - Suggest some optional features to allow greater
    configurability and control.  These features were developed
    specifically to solve problems that have shown up in actual
    use by the NSFnet community.  However, they should have more
    general utility.

The Routing Information Protocol (RIP) described here is loosely based on the program "routed", distributed with the 4.3 Berkeley Software Distribution. However, there are several other implementations of what is supposed to be the same protocol. Unfortunately, these various implementations disagree in various details. The specifications here represent a combination of features taken from various implementations. We believe that a program designed according to this document will interoperate with routed, and with all other implementations of RIP of which we are aware.

Note that this description adopts a different view than most existing implementations about when metrics should be incremented. By making a corresponding change in the metric used for a local network, we have retained compatibility with other existing implementations. See section 3.6 for details on this issue.

Introduction

This memo describes one protocol in a series of routing protocols based on the Bellman-Ford (or distance vector) algorithm. This algorithm has been used for routing computations in computer networks since the early days of the ARPANET. The particular packet formats and protocol described here are based on the program "routed", which is included with the Berkeley distribution of Unix. It has become a de facto standard for exchange of routing information among gateways and hosts. It is implemented for this purpose by most commercial vendors of IP gateways. Note, however, that many of these vendors have their own protocols which are used among their own gateways.

This protocol is most useful as an "interior gateway protocol". In a nationwide network such as the current Internet, it is very unlikely that a single routing protocol will used for the whole network. Rather, the network will be organized as a collection of "autonomous systems". An autonomous system will in general be administered by a single entity, or at least will have some reasonable degree of technical and administrative control. Each autonomous system will have its own routing technology. This may well be different for different autonomous systems. The routing protocol used within an autonomous system is referred to as an interior gateway protocol, or "IGP". A separate protocol is used to interface among the autonomous

systems. The earliest such protocol, still used in the Internet, is "EGP" (exterior gateway protocol). Such protocols are now usually referred to as inter-AS routing protocols. RIP was designed to work with moderate-size networks using reasonably homogeneous technology. Thus it is suitable as an IGP for many campuses and for regional networks using serial lines whose speeds do not vary widely. It is not intended for use in more complex environments. For more information on the context into which RIP is expected to fit, see Braden and Postel [3].

RIP is one of a class of algorithms known as "distance vector algorithms". The earliest description of this class of algorithms known to the author is in Ford and Fulkerson [6]. Because of this, they are sometimes known as Ford-Fulkerson algorithms. The term Bellman-Ford is also used. It comes from the fact that the formulation is based on Bellman's equation, the basis of "dynamic programming". (For a standard introduction to this area, see [1].) The presentation in this document is closely based on [2]. This text contains an introduction to the mathematics of routing algorithms. It describes and justifies several variants of the algorithm presented here, as well as a number of other related algorithms. The basic algorithms described in this protocol were used in computer routing as early as 1969 in the ARPANET. However, the specific ancestry of this protocol is within the Xerox network protocols. The PUP protocols (see [4]) used the Gateway Information Protocol to exchange routing information. A somewhat updated version of this protocol was adopted for the Xerox Network Systems (XNS) architecture, with the name Routing Information Protocol. (See [7].) Berkeley's routed is largely the same as the Routing Information Protocol, with XNS addresses replaced by a more general address format capable of handling IP and other types of address, and with routing updates limited to one every 30 seconds. Because of this similarity, the term Routing Information Protocol (or just RIP) is used to refer to both the XNS protocol and the protocol used by routed.

RIP is intended for use within the IP-based Internet. The Internet is organized into a number of networks connected by gateways. The networks may be either point-to-point links or more complex networks such as Ethernet or the ARPANET. Hosts and gateways are presented with IP datagrams addressed to some host. Routing is the method by which the host or gateway decides where to send the datagram. It may be able to send the datagram directly to the destination, if that destination is on one of the networks that are directly connected to the host or gateway. However, the interesting case is when the destination is not directly reachable. In this case, the host or gateway attempts to send the datagram to a gateway that is nearer the destination. The goal of a routing protocol is very simple: It is to

supply the information that is needed to do routing.

Limitations of the protocol

This protocol does not solve every possible routing problem. As mentioned above, it is primary intended for use as an IGP, in reasonably homogeneous networks of moderate size. In addition, the following specific limitations should be mentioned:

  - The protocol is limited to networks whose longest path
    involves 15 hops.  The designers believe that the basic
    protocol design is inappropriate for larger networks.  Note
    that this statement of the limit assumes that a cost of 1
    is used for each network.  This is the way RIP is normally
    configured.  If the system administrator chooses to use
    larger costs, the upper bound of 15 can easily become a
    problem.
  - The protocol depends upon "counting to infinity" to resolve
    certain unusual situations.  (This will be explained in the
    next section.)  If the system of networks has several
    hundred networks, and a routing loop was formed involving
    all of them, the resolution of the loop would require
    either much time (if the frequency of routing updates were
    limited) or bandwidth (if updates were sent whenever
    changes were detected).  Such a loop would consume a large
    amount of network bandwidth before the loop was corrected.
    We believe that in realistic cases, this will not be a
    problem except on slow lines.  Even then, the problem will
    be fairly unusual, since various precautions are taken that
    should prevent these problems in most cases.
  - This protocol uses fixed "metrics" to compare alternative
    routes.  It is not appropriate for situations where routes
    need to be chosen based on real-time parameters such a
    measured delay, reliability, or load.  The obvious
    extensions to allow metrics of this type are likely to
    introduce instabilities of a sort that the protocol is not
    designed to handle.

Organization of this document

The main body of this document is organized into two parts, which occupy the next two sections:

  2   A conceptual development and justification of distance vector
      algorithms in general.
  3   The actual protocol description.

Each of these two sections can largely stand on its own. Section 2 attempts to give an informal presentation of the mathematical underpinnings of the algorithm. Note that the presentation follows a "spiral" method. An initial, fairly simple algorithm is described. Then refinements are added to it in successive sections. Section 3 is the actual protocol description. Except where specific references are made to section 2, it should be possible to implement RIP entirely from the specifications given in section 3.

Distance Vector Algorithms

Routing is the task of finding a path from a sender to a desired destination. In the IP "Catenet model" this reduces primarily to a matter of finding gateways between networks. As long as a message remains on a single network or subnet, any routing problems are solved by technology that is specific to the network. For example, the Ethernet and the ARPANET each define a way in which any sender can talk to any specified destination within that one network. IP routing comes in primarily when messages must go from a sender on one such network to a destination on a different one. In that case, the message must pass through gateways connecting the networks. If the networks are not adjacent, the message may pass through several intervening networks, and the gateways connecting them. Once the message gets to a gateway that is on the same network as the destination, that network's own technology is used to get to the destination.

Throughout this section, the term "network" is used generically to cover a single broadcast network (e.g., an Ethernet), a point to point line, or the ARPANET. The critical point is that a network is treated as a single entity by IP. Either no routing is necessary (as with a point to point line), or that routing is done in a manner that is transparent to IP, allowing IP to treat the entire network as a single fully-connected system (as with an Ethernet or the ARPANET). Note that the term "network" is used in a somewhat different way in discussions of IP addressing. A single IP network number may be assigned to a collection of networks, with "subnet" addressing being used to describe the individual networks. In effect, we are using the term "network" here to refer to subnets in cases where subnet addressing is in use.

A number of different approaches for finding routes between networks are possible. One useful way of categorizing these approaches is on the basis of the type of information the gateways need to exchange in order to be able to find routes. Distance vector algorithms are based on the exchange of only a small amount of information. Each

entity (gateway or host) that participates in the routing protocol is assumed to keep information about all of the destinations within the system. Generally, information about all entities connected to one network is summarized by a single entry, which describes the route to all destinations on that network. This summarization is possible because as far as IP is concerned, routing within a network is invisible. Each entry in this routing database includes the next gateway to which datagrams destined for the entity should be sent. In addition, it includes a "metric" measuring the total distance to the entity. Distance is a somewhat generalized concept, which may cover the time delay in getting messages to the entity, the dollar cost of sending messages to it, etc. Distance vector algorithms get their name from the fact that it is possible to compute optimal routes when the only information exchanged is the list of these distances. Furthermore, information is only exchanged among entities that are adjacent, that is, entities that share a common network.

Although routing is most commonly based on information about networks, it is sometimes necessary to keep track of the routes to individual hosts. The RIP protocol makes no formal distinction between networks and hosts. It simply describes exchange of information about destinations, which may be either networks or hosts. (Note however, that it is possible for an implementor to choose not to support host routes. See section 3.2.) In fact, the mathematical developments are most conveniently thought of in terms of routes from one host or gateway to another. When discussing the algorithm in abstract terms, it is best to think of a routing entry for a network as an abbreviation for routing entries for all of the entities connected to that network. This sort of abbreviation makes sense only because we think of networks as having no internal structure that is visible at the IP level. Thus, we will generally assign the same distance to every entity in a given network.

We said above that each entity keeps a routing database with one entry for every possible destination in the system. An actual implementation is likely to need to keep the following information about each destination:

  - address: in IP implementations of these algorithms, this
    will be the IP address of the host or network.
  - gateway: the first gateway along the route to the
    destination.
  - interface: the physical network which must be used to reach
    the first gateway.
  - metric: a number, indicating the distance to the
    destination.
  - timer: the amount of time since the entry was last updated.

In addition, various flags and other internal information will probably be included. This database is initialized with a description of the entities that are directly connected to the system. It is updated according to information received in messages from neighboring gateways.

The most important information exchanged by the hosts and gateways is that carried in update messages. Each entity that participates in the routing scheme sends update messages that describe the routing database as it currently exists in that entity. It is possible to maintain optimal routes for the entire system by using only information obtained from neighboring entities. The algorithm used for that will be described in the next section.

As we mentioned above, the purpose of routing is to find a way to get datagrams to their ultimate destinations. Distance vector algorithms are based on a table giving the best route to every destination in the system. Of course, in order to define which route is best, we have to have some way of measuring goodness. This is referred to as the "metric".

In simple networks, it is common to use a metric that simply counts how many gateways a message must go through. In more complex networks, a metric is chosen to represent the total amount of delay that the message suffers, the cost of sending it, or some other quantity which may be minimized. The main requirement is that it must be possible to represent the metric as a sum of "costs" for individual hops.

Formally, if it is possible to get from entity i to entity j directly (i.e., without passing through another gateway between), then a cost, d(i,j), is associated with the hop between i and j. In the normal case where all entities on a given network are considered to be the same, d(i,j) is the same for all destinations on a given network, and represents the cost of using that network. To get the metric of a complete route, one just adds up the costs of the individual hops that make up the route. For the purposes of this memo, we assume that the costs are positive integers.

Let D(i,j) represent the metric of the best route from entity i to entity j. It should be defined for every pair of entities. d(i,j) represents the costs of the individual steps. Formally, let d(i,j) represent the cost of going directly from entity i to entity j. It is infinite if i and j are not immediate neighbors. (Note that d(i,i)

is infinite. That is, we don't consider there to be a direct connection from a node to itself.) Since costs are additive, it is easy to show that the best metric must be described by

         D(i,i) = 0,                      all i
         D(i,j) = min [d(i,k) + D(k,j)],  otherwise
                   k

and that the best routes start by going from i to those neighbors k for which d(i,k) + D(k,j) has the minimum value. (These things can be shown by induction on the number of steps in the routes.) Note that we can limit the second equation to k's that are immediate neighbors of i. For the others, d(i,k) is infinite, so the term involving them can never be the minimum.

It turns out that one can compute the metric by a simple algorithm based on this. Entity i gets its neighbors k to send it their estimates of their distances to the destination j. When i gets the estimates from k, it adds d(i,k) to each of the numbers. This is simply the cost of traversing the network between i and k. Now and then i compares the values from all of its neighbors and picks the smallest.

A proof is given in [2] that this algorithm will converge to the correct estimates of D(i,j) in finite time in the absence of topology changes. The authors make very few assumptions about the order in which the entities send each other their information, or when the min is recomputed. Basically, entities just can't stop sending updates or recomputing metrics, and the networks can't delay messages forever. (Crash of a routing entity is a topology change.) Also, their proof does not make any assumptions about the initial estimates of D(i,j), except that they must be non-negative. The fact that these fairly weak assumptions are good enough is important. Because we don't have to make assumptions about when updates are sent, it is safe to run the algorithm asynchronously. That is, each entity can send updates according to its own clock. Updates can be dropped by the network, as long as they don't all get dropped. Because we don't have to make assumptions about the starting condition, the algorithm can handle changes. When the system changes, the routing algorithm starts moving to a new equilibrium, using the old one as its starting point. It is important that the algorithm will converge in finite time no matter what the starting point. Otherwise certain kinds of changes might lead to non-convergent behavior.

The statement of the algorithm given above (and the proof) assumes that each entity keeps copies of the estimates that come from each of its neighbors, and now and then does a min over all of the neighbors. In fact real implementations don't necessarily do that. They simply

remember the best metric seen so far, and the identity of the neighbor that sent it. They replace this information whenever they see a better (smaller) metric. This allows them to compute the minimum incrementally, without having to store data from all of the neighbors.

There is one other difference between the algorithm as described in texts and those used in real protocols such as RIP: the description above would have each entity include an entry for itself, showing a distance of zero. In fact this is not generally done. Recall that all entities on a network are normally summarized by a single entry for the network. Consider the situation of a host or gateway G that is connected to network A. C represents the cost of using network A (usually a metric of one). (Recall that we are assuming that the internal structure of a network is not visible to IP, and thus the cost of going between any two entities on it is the same.) In principle, G should get a message from every other entity H on network A, showing a cost of 0 to get from that entity to itself. G would then compute C + 0 as the distance to H. Rather than having G look at all of these identical messages, it simply starts out by making an entry for network A in its table, and assigning it a metric of C. This entry for network A should be thought of as summarizing the entries for all other entities on network A. The only entity on A that can't be summarized by that common entry is G itself, since the cost of going from G to G is 0, not C. But since we never need those 0 entries, we can safely get along with just the single entry for network A. Note one other implication of this strategy: because we don't need to use the 0 entries for anything, hosts that do not function as gateways don't need to send any update messages. Clearly hosts that don't function as gateways (i.e., hosts that are connected to only one network) can have no useful information to contribute other than their own entry D(i,i) = 0. As they have only the one interface, it is easy to see that a route to any other network through them will simply go in that interface and then come right back out it. Thus the cost of such a route will be greater than the best cost by at least C. Since we don't need the 0 entries, non- gateways need not participate in the routing protocol at all.

Let us summarize what a host or gateway G does. For each destination in the system, G will keep a current estimate of the metric for that destination (i.e., the total cost of getting to it) and the identity of the neighboring gateway on whose data that metric is based. If the destination is on a network that is directly connected to G, then G simply uses an entry that shows the cost of using the network, and the fact that no gateway is needed to get to the destination. It is easy to show that once the computation has converged to the correct metrics, the neighbor that is recorded by this technique is in fact the first gateway on the path to the destination. (If there are

several equally good paths, it is the first gateway on one of them.) This combination of destination, metric, and gateway is typically referred to as a route to the destination with that metric, using that gateway.

The method so far only has a way to lower the metric, as the existing metric is kept until a smaller one shows up. It is possible that the initial estimate might be too low. Thus, there must be a way to increase the metric. It turns out to be sufficient to use the following rule: suppose the current route to a destination has metric D and uses gateway G. If a new set of information arrived from some source other than G, only update the route if the new metric is better than D. But if a new set of information arrives from G itself, always update D to the new value. It is easy to show that with this rule, the incremental update process produces the same routes as a calculation that remembers the latest information from all the neighbors and does an explicit minimum. (Note that the discussion so far assumes that the network configuration is static. It does not allow for the possibility that a system might fail.)

To summarize, here is the basic distance vector algorithm as it has been developed so far. (Note that this is not a statement of the RIP protocol. There are several refinements still to be added.) The following procedure is carried out by every entity that participates in the routing protocol. This must include all of the gateways in the system. Hosts that are not gateways may participate as well.

   - Keep a table with an entry for every possible destination
    in the system.  The entry contains the distance D to the
    destination, and the first gateway G on the route to that
    network.  Conceptually, there should be an entry for the
    entity itself, with metric 0, but this is not actually
    included.
  - Periodically, send a routing update to every neighbor.  The
    update is a set of messages that contain all of the
    information from the routing table.  It contains an entry
    for each destination, with the distance shown to that
    destination.
  - When a routing update arrives from a neighbor G', add the
    cost associated with the network that is shared with G'.
    (This should be the network over which the update arrived.)
    Call the resulting distance D'.  Compare the resulting
    distances with the current routing table entries.  If the
    new distance D' for N is smaller than the existing value D,
    adopt the new route.  That is, change the table entry for N
    to have metric D' and gateway G'.  If G' is the gateway
    from which the existing route came, i.e., G' = G, then use
    the new metric even if it is larger than the old one.

Dealing with changes in topology

The discussion above assumes that the topology of the network is fixed. In practice, gateways and lines often fail and come back up. To handle this possibility, we need to modify the algorithm slightly. The theoretical version of the algorithm involved a minimum over all immediate neighbors. If the topology changes, the set of neighbors changes. Therefore, the next time the calculation is done, the change will be reflected. However, as mentioned above, actual implementations use an incremental version of the minimization. Only the best route to any given destination is remembered. If the gateway involved in that route should crash, or the network connection to it break, the calculation might never reflect the change. The algorithm as shown so far depends upon a gateway notifying its neighbors if its metrics change. If the gateway crashes, then it has no way of notifying neighbors of a change.

In order to handle problems of this kind, distance vector protocols must make some provision for timing out routes. The details depend upon the specific protocol. As an example, in RIP every gateway that participates in routing sends an update message to all its neighbors once every 30 seconds. Suppose the current route for network N uses gateway G. If we don't hear from G for 180 seconds, we can assume that either the gateway has crashed or the network connecting us to it has become unusable. Thus, we mark the route as invalid. When we hear from another neighbor that has a valid route to N, the valid route will replace the invalid one. Note that we wait for 180 seconds before timing out a route even though we expect to hear from each neighbor every 30 seconds. Unfortunately, messages are occasionally lost by networks. Thus, it is probably not a good idea to invalidate a route based on a single missed message.

As we will see below, it is useful to have a way to notify neighbors that there currently isn't a valid route to some network. RIP, along with several other protocols of this class, does this through a normal update message, by marking that network as unreachable. A specific metric value is chosen to indicate an unreachable destination; that metric value is larger than the largest valid metric that we expect to see. In the existing implementation of RIP, 16 is used. This value is normally referred to as "infinity", since it is larger than the largest valid metric. 16 may look like a surprisingly small number. It is chosen to be this small for reasons that we will see shortly. In most implementations, the same convention is used internally to flag a route as invalid.

Preventing instability

The algorithm as presented up to this point will always allow a host or gateway to calculate a correct routing table. However, that is still not quite enough to make it useful in practice. The proofs referred to above only show that the routing tables will converge to the correct values in finite time. They do not guarantee that this time will be small enough to be useful, nor do they say what will happen to the metrics for networks that become inaccessible.

It is easy enough to extend the mathematics to handle routes becoming inaccessible. The convention suggested above will do that. We choose a large metric value to represent "infinity". This value must be large enough that no real metric would ever get that large. For the purposes of this example, we will use the value 16. Suppose a network becomes inaccessible. All of the immediately neighboring gateways time out and set the metric for that network to 16. For purposes of analysis, we can assume that all the neighboring gateways have gotten a new piece of hardware that connects them directly to the vanished network, with a cost of 16. Since that is the only connection to the vanished network, all the other gateways in the system will converge to new routes that go through one of those gateways. It is easy to see that once convergence has happened, all the gateways will have metrics of at least 16 for the vanished network. Gateways one hop away from the original neighbors would end up with metrics of at least 17; gateways two hops away would end up with at least 18, etc. As these metrics are larger than the maximum metric value, they are all set to 16. It is obvious that the system will now converge to a metric of 16 for the vanished network at all gateways.

Unfortunately, the question of how long convergence will take is not amenable to quite so simple an answer. Before going any further, it will be useful to look at an example (taken from [2]). Note, by the way, that what we are about to show will not happen with a correct implementation of RIP. We are trying to show why certain features are needed. Note that the letters correspond to gateways, and the lines to networks.

        A-----B
         \   / \
          \ /  |
           C  /    all networks have cost 1, except
           | /     for the direct link from C to D, which
           |/      has cost 10
           D
           |<=== target network

Each gateway will have a table showing a route to each network.

However, for purposes of this illustration, we show only the routes from each gateway to the network marked at the bottom of the diagram.

        D:  directly connected, metric 1
        B:  route via D, metric 2
        C:  route via B, metric 3
        A:  route via B, metric 3

Now suppose that the link from B to D fails. The routes should now adjust to use the link from C to D. Unfortunately, it will take a while for this to this to happen. The routing changes start when B notices that the route to D is no longer usable. For simplicity, the chart below assumes that all gateways send updates at the same time. The chart shows the metric for the target network, as it appears in the routing table at each gateway.

    time ------>
    D: dir, 1   dir, 1   dir, 1   dir, 1  ...  dir, 1   dir, 1
    B: unreach  C,   4   C,   5   C,   6       C,  11   C,  12
    C: B,   3   A,   4   A,   5   A,   6       A,  11   D,  11
    A: B,   3   C,   4   C,   5   C,   6       C,  11   C,  12
    dir = directly connected
    unreach = unreachable

Here's the problem: B is able to get rid of its failed route using a timeout mechanism. But vestiges of that route persist in the system for a long time. Initially, A and C still think they can get to D via B. So, they keep sending updates listing metrics of 3. In the next iteration, B will then claim that it can get to D via either A or C. Of course, it can't. The routes being claimed by A and C are now gone, but they have no way of knowing that yet. And even when they discover that their routes via B have gone away, they each think there is a route available via the other. Eventually the system converges, as all the mathematics claims it must. But it can take some time to do so. The worst case is when a network becomes completely inaccessible from some part of the system. In that case, the metrics may increase slowly in a pattern like the one above until they finally reach infinity. For this reason, the problem is called "counting to infinity".

You should now see why "infinity" is chosen to be as small as possible. If a network becomes completely inaccessible, we want counting to infinity to be stopped as soon as possible. Infinity must be large enough that no real route is that big. But it

shouldn't be any bigger than required. Thus the choice of infinity is a tradeoff between network size and speed of convergence in case counting to infinity happens. The designers of RIP believed that the protocol was unlikely to be practical for networks with a diameter larger than 15.

There are several things that can be done to prevent problems like this. The ones used by RIP are called "split horizon with poisoned reverse", and "triggered updates".

Split horizon

Note that some of the problem above is caused by the fact that A and C are engaged in a pattern of mutual deception. Each claims to be able to get to D via the other. This can be prevented by being a bit more careful about where information is sent. In particular, it is never useful to claim reachability for a destination network to the neighbor(s) from which the route was learned. "Split horizon" is a scheme for avoiding problems caused by including routes in updates sent to the gateway from which they were learned. The "simple split horizon" scheme omits routes learned from one neighbor in updates sent to that neighbor. "Split horizon with poisoned reverse" includes such routes in updates, but sets their metrics to infinity.

If A thinks it can get to D via C, its messages to C should indicate that D is unreachable. If the route through C is real, then C either has a direct connection to D, or a connection through some other gateway. C's route can't possibly go back to A, since that forms a loop. By telling C that D is unreachable, A simply guards against the possibility that C might get confused and believe that there is a route through A. This is obvious for a point to point line. But consider the possibility that A and C are connected by a broadcast network such as an Ethernet, and there are other gateways on that network. If A has a route through C, it should indicate that D is unreachable when talking to any other gateway on that network. The other gateways on the network can get to C themselves. They would never need to get to C via A. If A's best route is really through C, no other gateway on that network needs to know that A can reach D. This is fortunate, because it means that the same update message that is used for C can be used for all other gateways on the same network. Thus, update messages can be sent by broadcast.

In general, split horizon with poisoned reverse is safer than simple split horizon. If two gateways have routes pointing at each other, advertising reverse routes with a metric of 16 will break the loop immediately. If the reverse routes are simply not advertised, the erroneous routes will have to be eliminated by waiting for a timeout. However, poisoned reverse does have a disadvantage: it increases the

size of the routing messages. Consider the case of a campus backbone connecting a number of different buildings. In each building, there is a gateway connecting the backbone to a local network. Consider what routing updates those gateways should broadcast on the backbone network. All that the rest of the network really needs to know about each gateway is what local networks it is connected to. Using simple split horizon, only those routes would appear in update messages sent by the gateway to the backbone network. If split horizon with poisoned reverse is used, the gateway must mention all routes that it learns from the backbone, with metrics of 16. If the system is large, this can result in a large update message, almost all of whose entries indicate unreachable networks.

In a static sense, advertising reverse routes with a metric of 16 provides no additional information. If there are many gateways on one broadcast network, these extra entries can use significant bandwidth. The reason they are there is to improve dynamic behavior. When topology changes, mentioning routes that should not go through the gateway as well as those that should can speed up convergence. However, in some situations, network managers may prefer to accept somewhat slower convergence in order to minimize routing overhead. Thus implementors may at their option implement simple split horizon rather than split horizon with poisoned reverse, or they may provide a configuration option that allows the network manager to choose which behavior to use. It is also permissible to implement hybrid schemes that advertise some reverse routes with a metric of 16 and omit others. An example of such a scheme would be to use a metric of 16 for reverse routes for a certain period of time after routing changes involving them, and thereafter omitting them from updates.

Triggered updates

Split horizon with poisoned reverse will prevent any routing loops that involve only two gateways. However, it is still possible to end up with patterns in which three gateways are engaged in mutual deception. For example, A may believe it has a route through B, B through C, and C through A. Split horizon cannot stop such a loop. This loop will only be resolved when the metric reaches infinity and the network involved is then declared unreachable. Triggered updates are an attempt to speed up this convergence. To get triggered updates, we simply add a rule that whenever a gateway changes the metric for a route, it is required to send update messages almost immediately, even if it is not yet time for one of the regular update message. (The timing details will differ from protocol to protocol. Some distance vector protocols, including RIP, specify a small time delay, in order to avoid having triggered updates generate excessive network traffic.) Note how this combines with the rules for computing new metrics. Suppose a gateway's route to destination N

goes through gateway G. If an update arrives from G itself, the receiving gateway is required to believe the new information, whether the new metric is higher or lower than the old one. If the result is a change in metric, then the receiving gateway will send triggered updates to all the hosts and gateways directly connected to it. They in turn may each send updates to their neighbors. The result is a cascade of triggered updates. It is easy to show which gateways and hosts are involved in the cascade. Suppose a gateway G times out a route to destination N. G will send triggered updates to all of its neighbors. However, the only neighbors who will believe the new information are those whose routes for N go through G. The other gateways and hosts will see this as information about a new route that is worse than the one they are already using, and ignore it. The neighbors whose routes go through G will update their metrics and send triggered updates to all of their neighbors. Again, only those neighbors whose routes go through them will pay attention. Thus, the triggered updates will propagate backwards along all paths leading to gateway G, updating the metrics to infinity. This propagation will stop as soon as it reaches a portion of the network whose route to destination N takes some other path.

If the system could be made to sit still while the cascade of triggered updates happens, it would be possible to prove that counting to infinity will never happen. Bad routes would always be removed immediately, and so no routing loops could form.

Unfortunately, things are not so nice. While the triggered updates are being sent, regular updates may be happening at the same time. Gateways that haven't received the triggered update yet will still be sending out information based on the route that no longer exists. It is possible that after the triggered update has gone through a gateway, it might receive a normal update from one of these gateways that hasn't yet gotten the word. This could reestablish an orphaned remnant of the faulty route. If triggered updates happen quickly enough, this is very unlikely. However, counting to infinity is still possible.

Specifications for the protocol

RIP is intended to allow hosts and gateways to exchange information for computing routes through an IP-based network. RIP is a distance vector protocol. Thus, it has the general features described in section 2. RIP may be implemented by both hosts and gateways. As in most IP documentation, the term "host" will be used here to cover either. RIP is used to convey information about routes to "destinations", which may be individual hosts, networks, or a special destination used to convey a default route.

Any host that uses RIP is assumed to have interfaces to one or more networks. These are referred to as its "directly-connected networks". The protocol relies on access to certain information about each of these networks. The most important is its metric or "cost". The metric of a network is an integer between 1 and 15 inclusive. It is set in some manner not specified in this protocol. Most existing implementations always use a metric of 1. New implementations should allow the system administrator to set the cost of each network. In addition to the cost, each network will have an IP network number and a subnet mask associated with it. These are to be set by the system administrator in a manner not specified in this protocol.

Note that the rules specified in section 3.2 assume that there is a single subnet mask applying to each IP network, and that only the subnet masks for directly-connected networks are known. There may be systems that use different subnet masks for different subnets within a single network. There may also be instances where it is desirable for a system to know the subnets masks of distant networks. However, such situations will require modifications of the rules which govern the spread of subnet information. Such modifications raise issues of interoperability, and thus must be viewed as modifying the protocol.

Each host that implements RIP is assumed to have a routing table. This table has one entry for every destination that is reachable through the system described by RIP. Each entry contains at least the following information:

  - The IP address of the destination.
  - A metric, which represents the total cost of getting a
    datagram from the host to that destination.  This metric is
    the sum of the costs associated with the networks that
    would be traversed in getting to the destination.
  - The IP address of the next gateway along the path to the
    destination.  If the destination is on one of the
    directly-connected networks, this item is not needed.
  - A flag to indicate that information about the route has
    changed recently.  This will be referred to as the "route
    change flag."
  - Various timers associated with the route.  See section 3.3
    for more details on them.

The entries for the directly-connected networks are set up by the host, using information gathered by means not specified in this

protocol. The metric for a directly-connected network is set to the cost of that network. In existing RIP implementations, 1 is always used for the cost. In that case, the RIP metric reduces to a simple hop-count. More complex metrics may be used when it is desirable to show preference for some networks over others, for example because of differences in bandwidth or reliability.

Implementors may also choose to allow the system administrator to enter additional routes. These would most likely be routes to hosts or networks outside the scope of the routing system.

Entries for destinations other these initial ones are added and updated by the algorithms described in the following sections.

In order for the protocol to provide complete information on routing, every gateway in the system must participate in it. Hosts that are not gateways need not participate, but many implementations make provisions for them to listen to routing information in order to allow them to maintain their routing tables.

Message formats

RIP is a UDP-based protocol. Each host that uses RIP has a routing process that sends and receives datagrams on UDP port number 520. All communications directed at another host's RIP processor are sent to port 520. All routing update messages are sent from port 520. Unsolicited routing update messages have both the source and destination port equal to 520. Those sent in response to a request are sent to the port from which the request came. Specific queries and debugging requests may be sent from ports other than 520, but they are directed to port 520 on the target machine.

There are provisions in the protocol to allow "silent" RIP processes. A silent process is one that normally does not send out any messages. However, it listens to messages sent by others. A silent RIP might be used by hosts that do not act as gateways, but wish to listen to routing updates in order to monitor local gateways and to keep their internal routing tables up to date. (See [5] for a discussion of various ways that hosts can keep track of network topology.) A gateway that has lost contact with all but one of its networks might choose to become silent, since it is effectively no longer a gateway.

However, this should not be done if there is any chance that neighboring gateways might depend upon its messages to detect that the failed network has come back into operation. (The 4BSD routed program uses routing packets to monitor the operation of point-to- point links.)

The packet format is shown in Figure 1.

  Format of datagrams containing network information.  Field sizes
  are given in octets.  Unless otherwise specified, fields contain
  binary integers, in normal Internet order with the most-significant
  octet first.  Each tick mark represents one bit.
   0                   1                   2                   3 3
   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  | command (1)   | version (1)   |      must be zero (2)         |
  +---------------+---------------+-------------------------------+
  | address family identifier (2) |      must be zero (2)         |
  +-------------------------------+-------------------------------+
  |                         IP address (4)                        |
  +---------------------------------------------------------------+
  |                        must be zero (4)                       |
  +---------------------------------------------------------------+
  |                        must be zero (4)                       |
  +---------------------------------------------------------------+
  |                          metric (4)                           |
  +---------------------------------------------------------------+
                                  .
                                  .
                                  .
  The portion of the datagram from address family identifier through
  metric may appear up to 25 times.  IP address is the usual 4-octet
  Internet address, in network order.
                      Figure 1.   Packet format

Every datagram contains a command, a version number, and possible arguments. This document describes version 1 of the protocol. Details of processing the version number are described in section 3.4. The command field is used to specify the purpose of this datagram. Here is a summary of the commands implemented in version 1:

1 - request A request for the responding system to send all or

               part of its routing table.

2 - response A message containing all or part of the sender's

               routing table.  This message may be sent in response
               to a request or poll, or it may be an update message
               generated by the sender.

3 - traceon Obsolete. Messages containing this command are to be

               ignored.

4 - traceoff Obsolete. Messages containing this command are to be

               ignored.

5 - reserved This value is used by Sun Microsystems for its own

               purposes.  If new commands are added in any
               succeeding version, they should begin with 6.
               Messages containing this command may safely be
               ignored by implementations that do not choose to
               respond to it.

For request and response, the rest of the datagram contains a list of destinations, with information about each. Each entry in this list contains a destination network or host, and the metric for it. The packet format is intended to allow RIP to carry routing information for several different protocols. Thus, each entry has an address family identifier to indicate what type of address is specified in that entry. This document only describes routing for Internet networks. The address family identifier for IP is 2. None of the RIP implementations available to the author implement any other type of address. However, to allow for future development, implementations are required to skip entries that specify address families that are not supported by the implementation. (The size of these entries will be the same as the size of an entry specifying an IP address.) Processing of the message continues normally after any unsupported entries are skipped. The IP address is the usual Internet address, stored as 4 octets in network order. The metric field must contain a value between 1 and 15 inclusive, specifying the current metric for the destination, or the value 16, which indicates that the destination is not reachable. Each route sent by a gateway supercedes any previous route to the same destination from the same gateway.

The maximum datagram size is 512 octets. This includes only the portions of the datagram described above. It does not count the IP or UDP headers. The commands that involve network information allow information to be split across several datagrams. No special provisions are needed for continuations, since correct results will occur if the datagrams are processed individually.

Addressing considerations

As indicated in section 2, distance vector routing can be used to describe routes to individual hosts or to networks. The RIP protocol allows either of these possibilities. The destinations appearing in request and response messages can be networks, hosts, or a special code used to indicate a default address. In general, the kinds of routes actually used will depend upon the routing strategy used for the particular network. Many networks are set up so that routing

information for individual hosts is not needed. If every host on a given network or subnet is accessible through the same gateways, then there is no reason to mention individual hosts in the routing tables. However, networks that include point to point lines sometimes require gateways to keep track of routes to certain hosts. Whether this feature is required depends upon the addressing and routing approach used in the system. Thus, some implementations may choose not to support host routes. If host routes are not supported, they are to be dropped when they are received in response messages. (See section 3.4.2.)

The RIP packet formats do not distinguish among various types of address. Fields that are labeled "address" can contain any of the following:

  host address
  subnet number
  network number
  0, indicating a default route

Entities that use RIP are assumed to use the most specific information available when routing a datagram. That is, when routing a datagram, its destination address must first be checked against the list of host addresses. Then it must be checked to see whether it matches any known subnet or network number. Finally, if none of these match, the default route is used.

When a host evaluates information that it receives via RIP, its interpretation of an address depends upon whether it knows the subnet mask that applies to the net. If so, then it is possible to determine the meaning of the address. For example, consider net 128.6. It has a subnet mask of 255.255.255.0. Thus 128.6.0.0 is a network number, 128.6.4.0 is a subnet number, and 128.6.4.1 is a host address. However, if the host does not know the subnet mask, evaluation of an address may be ambiguous. If there is a non-zero host part, there is no clear way to determine whether the address represents a subnet number or a host address. As a subnet number would be useless without the subnet mask, addresses are assumed to represent hosts in this situation. In order to avoid this sort of ambiguity, hosts must not send subnet routes to hosts that cannot be expected to know the appropriate subnet mask. Normally hosts only know the subnet masks for directly-connected networks. Therefore, unless special provisions have been made, routes to a subnet must not be sent outside the network of which the subnet is a part.

This filtering is carried out by the gateways at the "border" of the subnetted network. These are gateways that connect that network with some other network. Within the subnetted network, each subnet is

treated as an individual network. Routing entries for each subnet are circulated by RIP. However, border gateways send only a single entry for the network as a whole to hosts in other networks. This means that a border gateway will send different information to different neighbors. For neighbors connected to the subnetted network, it generates a list of all subnets to which it is directly connected, using the subnet number. For neighbors connected to other networks, it makes a single entry for the network as a whole, showing the metric associated with that network. (This metric would normally be the smallest metric for the subnets to which the gateway is attached.)

Similarly, border gateways must not mention host routes for hosts within one of the directly-connected networks in messages to other networks. Those routes will be subsumed by the single entry for the network as a whole. We do not specify what to do with host routes for "distant" hosts (i.e., hosts not part of one of the directly- connected networks). Generally, these routes indicate some host that is reachable via a route that does not support other hosts on the network of which the host is a part.

The special address 0.0.0.0 is used to describe a default route. A default route is used when it is not convenient to list every possible network in the RIP updates, and when one or more closely- connected gateways in the system are prepared to handle traffic to the networks that are not listed explicitly. These gateways should create RIP entries for the address 0.0.0.0, just as if it were a network to which they are connected. The decision as to how gateways create entries for 0.0.0.0 is left to the implementor. Most commonly, the system administrator will be provided with a way to specify which gateways should create entries for 0.0.0.0. However, other mechanisms are possible. For example, an implementor might decide that any gateway that speaks EGP should be declared to be a default gateway. It may be useful to allow the network administrator to choose the metric to be used in these entries. If there is more than one default gateway, this will make it possible to express a preference for one over the other. The entries for 0.0.0.0 are handled by RIP in exactly the same manner as if there were an actual network with this address. However, the entry is used to route any datagram whose destination address does not match any other network in the table. Implementations are not required to support this convention. However, it is strongly recommended. Implementations that do not support 0.0.0.0 must ignore entries with this address. In such cases, they must not pass the entry on in their own RIP updates. System administrators should take care to make sure that routes to 0.0.0.0 do not propagate further than is intended. Generally, each autonomous system has its own preferred default gateway. Thus, routes involving 0.0.0.0 should generally not leave

the boundary of an autonomous system. The mechanisms for enforcing this are not specified in this document.

Timers

This section describes all events that are triggered by timers.

Every 30 seconds, the output process is instructed to generate a complete response to every neighboring gateway. When there are many gateways on a single network, there is a tendency for them to synchronize with each other such that they all issue updates at the same time. This can happen whenever the 30 second timer is affected by the processing load on the system. It is undesirable for the update messages to become synchronized, since it can lead to unnecessary collisions on broadcast networks. Thus, implementations are required to take one of two precautions.

  - The 30-second updates are triggered by a clock whose rate
    is not affected by system load or the time required to
    service the previous update timer.
  - The 30-second timer is offset by addition of a small random
    time each time it is set.

There are two timers associated with each route, a "timeout" and a "garbage-collection time". Upon expiration of the timeout, the route is no longer valid. However, it is retained in the table for a short time, so that neighbors can be notified that the route has been dropped. Upon expiration of the garbage-collection timer, the route is finally removed from the tables.

The timeout is initialized when a route is established, and any time an update message is received for the route. If 180 seconds elapse from the last time the timeout was initialized, the route is considered to have expired, and the deletion process which we are about to describe is started for it.

Deletions can occur for one of two reasons: (1) the timeout expires, or (2) the metric is set to 16 because of an update received from the current gateway. (See section 3.4.2 for a discussion processing updates from other gateways.) In either case, the following events happen:

  - The garbage-collection timer is set for 120 seconds.
  - The metric for the route is set to 16 (infinity).  This
    causes the route to be removed from service.
  - A flag is set noting that this entry has been changed, and
    the output process is signalled to trigger a response.

Until the garbage-collection timer expires, the route is included in all updates sent by this host, with a metric of 16 (infinity). When the garbage-collection timer expires, the route is deleted from the tables.

Should a new route to this network be established while the garbage- collection timer is running, the new route will replace the one that is about to be deleted. In this case the garbage-collection timer must be cleared.

See section 3.5 for a discussion of a delay that is required in carrying out triggered updates. Although implementation of that delay will require a timer, it is more natural to discuss it in section 3.5 than here.

Input processing

This section will describe the handling of datagrams received on UDP port 520. Before processing the datagrams in detail, certain general format checks must be made. These depend upon the version number field in the datagram, as follows:

  0   Datagrams whose version number is zero are to be ignored.
      These are from a previous version of the protocol, whose
      packet format was machine-specific.
  1   Datagrams whose version number is one are to be processed
      as described in the rest of this specification.  All fields
      that are described above as "must be zero" are to be checked.
      If any such field contains a non-zero value, the entire
      message is to be ignored.
  >1  Datagrams whose version number are greater than one are
      to be processed as described in the rest of this
      specification.  All fields that are described above as
      "must be zero" are to be ignored.  Future versions of the
      protocol may put data into these fields.  Version 1
      implementations are to ignore this extra data and process
      only the fields specified in this document.

After checking the version number and doing any other preliminary checks, processing will depend upon the value in the command field.

Request

Request is used to ask for a response containing all or part of the host's routing table. [Note that the term host is used for either host or gateway, in most cases it would be unusual for a non-gateway host to send RIP messages.] Normally, requests are sent as broadcasts, from a UDP source port of 520. In this case, silent processes do not respond to the request. Silent processes are by definition processes for which we normally do not want to see routing information. However, there may be situations involving gateway monitoring where it is desired to look at the routing table even for a silent process. In this case, the request should be sent from a UDP port number other than 520. If a request comes from port 520, silent processes do not respond. If the request comes from any other port, processes must respond even if they are silent.

The request is processed entry by entry. If there are no entries, no response is given. There is one special case. If there is exactly one entry in the request, with an address family identifier of 0 (meaning unspecified), and a metric of infinity (i.e., 16 for current implementations), this is a request to send the entire routing table. In that case, a call is made to the output process to send the routing table to the requesting port.

Except for this special case, processing is quite simple. Go down the list of entries in the request one by one. For each entry, look up the destination in the host's routing database. If there is a route, put that route's metric in the metric field in the datagram. If there isn't a route to the specified destination, put infinity (i.e., 16) in the metric field in the datagram. Once all the entries have been filled in, set the command to response and send the datagram back to the port from which it came.

Note that there is a difference in handling depending upon whether the request is for a specified set of destinations, or for a complete routing table. If the request is for a complete host table, normal output processing is done. This includes split horizon (see section 2.2.1) and subnet hiding (section 3.2), so that certain entries from the routing table will not be shown. If the request is for specific entries, they are looked up in the host table and the information is returned. No split horizon processing is done, and subnets are returned if requested. We anticipate that these requests are likely to be used for different purposes. When a host first comes up, it broadcasts requests on every connected network asking for a complete routing table. In general, we assume that complete routing tables are likely to be used to update another host's routing table. For this reason, split horizon and all other filtering must be used. Requests for specific networks are made only by diagnostic software,

and are not used for routing. In this case, the requester would want to know the exact contents of the routing database, and would not want any information hidden.

Response

Responses can be received for several different reasons:

  response to a specific query
  regular updates
  triggered updates triggered by a metric change

Processing is the same no matter how responses were generated.

Because processing of a response may update the host's routing table, the response must be checked carefully for validity. The response must be ignored if it is not from port 520. The IP source address should be checked to see whether the datagram is from a valid neighbor. The source of the datagram must be on a directly-connected network. It is also worth checking to see whether the response is from one of the host's own addresses. Interfaces on broadcast networks may receive copies of their own broadcasts immediately. If a host processes its own output as new input, confusion is likely, and such datagrams must be ignored (except as discussed in the next paragraph).

Before actually processing a response, it may be useful to use its presence as input to a process for keeping track of interface status. As mentioned above, we time out a route when we haven't heard from its gateway for a certain amount of time. This works fine for routes that come from another gateway. It is also desirable to know when one of our own directly-connected networks has failed. This document does not specify any particular method for doing this, as such methods depend upon the characteristics of the network and the hardware interface to it. However, such methods often involve listening for datagrams arriving on the interface. Arriving datagrams can be used as an indication that the interface is working. However, some caution must be used, as it is possible for interfaces to fail in such a way that input datagrams are received, but output datagrams are never sent successfully.

Now that the datagram as a whole has been validated, process the entries in it one by one. Again, start by doing validation. If the metric is greater than infinity, ignore the entry. (This should be impossible, if the other host is working correctly. Incorrect metrics and other format errors should probably cause alerts or be logged.) Then look at the destination address. Check the address family identifier. If it is not a value which is expected (e.g., 2

for Internet addresses), ignore the entry. Now check the address itself for various kinds of inappropriate addresses. Ignore the entry if the address is class D or E, if it is on net 0 (except for 0.0.0.0, if we accept default routes) or if it is on net 127 (the loopback network). Also, test for a broadcast address, i.e., anything whose host part is all ones on a network that supports broadcast, and ignore any such entry. If the implementor has chosen not to support host routes (see section 3.2), check to see whether the host portion of the address is non-zero; if so, ignore the entry.

Recall that the address field contains a number of unused octets. If the version number of the datagram is 1, they must also be checked. If any of them is nonzero, the entry is to be ignored. (Many of these cases indicate that the host from which the message came is not working correctly. Thus some form of error logging or alert should be triggered.)

Update the metric by adding the cost of the network on which the message arrived. If the result is greater than 16, use 16. That is,

  metric = MIN (metric + cost, 16)

Now look up the address to see whether this is already a route for it. In general, if not, we want to add one. However, there are various exceptions. If the metric is infinite, don't add an entry. (We would update an existing one, but we don't add new entries with infinite metric.) We want to avoid adding routes to hosts if the host is part of a net or subnet for which we have at least as good a route. If neither of these exceptions applies, add a new entry to the routing database. This includes the following actions:

  - Set the destination and metric to those from the datagram.
  - Set the gateway to be the host from which the datagram
    came.
  - Initialize the timeout for the route. If the garbage-
    collection timer is running for this route, stop it. (See
    section 3.3 for a discussion of the timers.)
  - Set the route change flag, and signal the output process to
    trigger an update (see 3.5).

If there is an existing route, first compare gateways. If this datagram is from the same gateway as the existing route, reinitialize the timeout. Next compare metrics. If the datagram is from the same gateway as the existing route and the new metric is different than the old one, or if the new metric is lower than the old one, do the

following actions:

  - adopt the route from the datagram.  That is, put the new
    metric in, and set the gateway to be the host from which
    the datagram came.
  - Initialize the timeout for the route.
  - Set the route change flag, and signal the output process to
    trigger an update (see 3.5).
  - If the new metric is 16 (infinity), the deletion process is
    started.

If the new metric is 16 (infinity), this starts the process for deleting the route. The route is no longer used for routing packets, and the deletion timer is started (see section 3.3). Note that a deletion is started only when the metric is first set to 16. If the metric was already 16, then a new deletion is not started. (Starting a deletion sets a timer. The concern is that we do not want to reset the timer every 30 seconds, as new messages arrive with an infinite metric.)

If the new metric is the same as the old one, it is simplest to do nothing further (beyond reinitializing the timeout, as specified above). However, the 4BSD routed uses an additional heuristic here. Normally, it is senseless to change to a route with the same metric as the existing route but a different gateway. If the existing route is showing signs of timing out, though, it may be better to switch to an equally-good alternative route immediately, rather than waiting for the timeout to happen. (See section 3.3 for a discussion of timeouts.) Therefore, if the new metric is the same as the old one, routed looks at the timeout for the existing route. If it is at least halfway to the expiration point, routed switches to the new route. That is, the gateway is changed to the source of the current message. This heuristic is optional.

Any entry that fails these tests is ignored, as it is no better than the current route.

Output Processing

This section describes the processing used to create response messages that contain all or part of the routing table. This processing may be triggered in any of the following ways:

  - by input processing when a request is seen.  In this case,
    the resulting message is sent to only one destination.
  - by the regular routing update.  Every 30 seconds, a
    response containing the whole routing table is sent to
    every neighboring gateway.  (See section 3.3.)
  - by triggered updates.  Whenever the metric for a route is
    changed, an update is triggered.  (The update may be
    delayed; see below.)

Before describing the way a message is generated for each directly- connected network, we will comment on how the destinations are chosen for the latter two cases. Normally, when a response is to be sent to all destinations (that is, either the regular update or a triggered update is being prepared), a response is sent to the host at the opposite end of each connected point-to-point link, and a response is broadcast on all connected networks that support broadcasting. Thus, one response is prepared for each directly-connected network and sent to the corresponding (destination or broadcast) address. In most cases, this reaches all neighboring gateways. However, there are some cases where this may not be good enough. This may involve a network that does not support broadcast (e.g., the ARPANET), or a situation involving dumb gateways. In such cases, it may be necessary to specify an actual list of neighboring hosts and gateways, and send a datagram to each one explicitly. It is left to the implementor to determine whether such a mechanism is needed, and to define how the list is specified.

Triggered updates require special handling for two reasons. First, experience shows that triggered updates can cause excessive loads on networks with limited capacity or with many gateways on them. Thus the protocol requires that implementors include provisions to limit the frequency of triggered updates. After a triggered update is sent, a timer should be set for a random time between 1 and 5 seconds. If other changes that would trigger updates occur before the timer expires, a single update is triggered when the timer expires, and the timer is then set to another random value between 1 and 5 seconds. Triggered updates may be suppressed if a regular update is due by the time the triggered update would be sent.

Second, triggered updates do not need to include the entire routing table. In principle, only those routes that have changed need to be included. Thus messages generated as part of a triggered update must include at least those routes that have their route change flag set. They may include additional routes, or all routes, at the discretion of the implementor; however, when full routing updates require multiple packets, sending all routes is strongly discouraged. When a triggered update is processed, messages should be generated for every directly-connected network. Split horizon processing is done when generating triggered updates as well as normal updates (see below).

If, after split horizon processing, a changed route will appear identical on a network as it did previously, the route need not be sent; if, as a result, no routes need be sent, the update may be omitted on that network. (If a route had only a metric change, or uses a new gateway that is on the same network as the old gateway, the route will be sent to the network of the old gateway with a metric of infinity both before and after the change.) Once all of the triggered updates have been generated, the route change flags should be cleared.

If input processing is allowed while output is being generated, appropriate interlocking must be done. The route change flags should not be changed as a result of processing input while a triggered update message is being generated.

The only difference between a triggered update and other update messages is the possible omission of routes that have not changed. The rest of the mechanisms about to be described must all apply to triggered updates.

Here is how a response datagram is generated for a particular directly-connected network:

The IP source address must be the sending host's address on that network. This is important because the source address is put into routing tables in other hosts. If an incorrect source address is used, other hosts may be unable to route datagrams. Sometimes gateways are set up with multiple IP addresses on a single physical interface. Normally, this means that several logical IP networks are being carried over one physical medium. In such cases, a separate update message must be sent for each address, with that address as the IP source address.

Set the version number to the current version of RIP. (The version described in this document is 1.) Set the command to response. Set the bytes labeled "must be zero" to zero. Now start filling in entries.

To fill in the entries, go down all the routes in the internal routing table. Recall that the maximum datagram size is 512 bytes. When there is no more space in the datagram, send the current message and start a new one. If a triggered update is being generated, only entries whose route change flags are set need be included.

See the description in Section 3.2 for a discussion of problems raised by subnet and host routes. Routes to subnets will be meaningless outside the network, and must be omitted if the destination is not on the same subnetted network; they should be

replaced with a single route to the network of which the subnets are a part. Similarly, routes to hosts must be eliminated if they are subsumed by a network route, as described in the discussion in Section 3.2.

If the route passes these tests, then the destination and metric are put into the entry in the output datagram. Routes must be included in the datagram even if their metrics are infinite. If the gateway for the route is on the network for which the datagram is being prepared, the metric in the entry is set to 16, or the entire entry is omitted. Omitting the entry is simple split horizon. Including an entry with metric 16 is split horizon with poisoned reverse. See Section 2.2 for a more complete discussion of these alternatives.

Compatibility

The protocol described in this document is intended to interoperate with routed and other existing implementations of RIP. However, a different viewpoint is adopted about when to increment the metric than was used in most previous implementations. Using the previous perspective, the internal routing table has a metric of 0 for all directly-connected networks. The cost (which is always 1) is added to the metric when the route is sent in an update message. By contrast, in this document directly-connected networks appear in the internal routing table with metrics equal to their costs; the metrics are not necessarily 1. In this document, the cost is added to the metrics when routes are received in update messages. Metrics from the routing table are sent in update messages without change (unless modified by split horizon).

These two viewpoints result in identical update messages being sent. Metrics in the routing table differ by a constant one in the two descriptions. Thus, there is no difference in effect. The change was made because the new description makes it easier to handle situations where different metrics are used on directly-attached networks.

Implementations that only support network costs of one need not change to match the new style of presentation. However, they must follow the description given in this document in all other ways.

Control functions

This section describes administrative controls. These are not part of the protocol per se. However, experience with existing networks suggests that they are important. Because they are not a necessary part of the protocol, they are considered optional. However, we strongly recommend that at least some of them be included in every

implementation.

These controls are intended primarily to allow RIP to be connected to networks whose routing may be unstable or subject to errors. Here are some examples:

It is sometimes desirable to limit the hosts and gateways from which information will be accepted. On occasion, hosts have been misconfigured in such a way that they begin sending inappropriate information.

A number of sites limit the set of networks that they allow in update messages. Organization A may have a connection to organization B that they use for direct communication. For security or performance reasons A may not be willing to give other organizations access to that connection. In such cases, A should not include B's networks in updates that A sends to third parties.

Here are some typical controls. Note, however, that the RIP protocol does not require these or any other controls.

  - a neighbor list - the network administrator should be able
    to define a list of neighbors for each host.  A host would
    accept response messages only from hosts on its list of
    neighbors.
  - allowing or disallowing specific destinations - the network
    administrator should be able to specify a list of
    destination addresses to allow or disallow.  The list would
    be associated with a particular interface in the incoming
    or outgoing direction.  Only allowed networks would be
    mentioned in response messages going out or processed in
    response messages coming in.  If a list of allowed
    addresses is specified, all other addresses are disallowed.
    If a list of disallowed addresses is specified, all other
    addresses are allowed.

REFERENCES and BIBLIOGRAPHY

[1] Bellman, R. E., "Dynamic Programming", Princeton University

   Press, Princeton, N.J., 1957.

[2] Bertsekas, D. P., and Gallaher, R. G., "Data Networks",

   Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N.J., 1987.

[3] Braden, R., and Postel, J., "Requirements for Internet Gateways",

   USC/Information Sciences Institute, RFC-1009, June 1987.

[4] Boggs, D. R., Shoch, J. F., Taft, E. A., and Metcalfe, R. M.,

   "Pup: An Internetwork Architecture", IEEE Transactions on
   Communications, April 1980.

[5] Clark, D. D., "Fault Isolation and Recovery," MIT-LCS, RFC-816,

   July 1982.

[6] Ford, L. R. Jr., and Fulkerson, D. R., "Flows in Networks",

   Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J., 1962.

[7] Xerox Corp., "Internet Transport Protocols", Xerox System

   Integration Standard XSIS 028112, December 1981.