Routing protocols

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Comparing OSPF and EIGRP
Parameter OSPF EIGRP
Type Link State Distance vector
Metric Bandwidth Bandwidth + delay

OSPF highlights

OSPF Highlights
Term Explanation
Router-ID Priority 1: Set with the router-id command
Priority 2: Highest loopback IP address
Priority 3: Highest active interface IP address
DR Designated Router Priority 1: Highest priority. Set with the ip ospf priority command on the interface
Priority 2: Higest Router-ID
BDR Backup Designated Router Priority 1: Next highest priority. Set with the ip ospf priority command on the interface
Priority 2: Next higest Router-ID
Communication Uses multicast addresses 224.0.0.5 and 224.0.0.6
224.0.0.5 - Multicast to neighbors
224.0.0.6 - Multicast to DR and BDR. DR will relay the information to DROthers on 224.0.0.5
Metric Uses bandwidth called cost - Default calculated as 108 / bandwidth
Metric is the accumulated cost to the destination network
default highest bandwidth is 108 = 100 Mbps. Change with the auto-cost reference-bandwidth command. Remember to change on all routers.
Serial interfaces - Remember to set the bandwidth command on serial interfaces to reflect the actual clock rate. (1,544 Mbps or 128 Kbps default)
Neighbour establisment Neighbors are established if hello- and dead-time interval are the same and network type are the same
hello interval default 10 seconds on point-to-point and multi-access networks
Default 30 seconds on non-broadcast multi-access (NBMA) segments (Frame Relay, X.25, ATM)
Dead-time interval default 40 seconds on point-to-point and multi-access networks
Default 120 seconds on non-broadcast multi-access (NBMA) segments (Frame Relay, X.25, ATM)
Packet types Hello - Discovers neighbors and builds adjacencies with them
LSR - Link State Request - Request information about specific link state information
LSU - Link State Update - Send information about specifically requested link states
LSAck - Links State Acknogledgement