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SonicOS 5.8.1 Administrator Guide
Advanced Routing Services (OSPF and RIP)
In addition to Policy Based Routing and RIP advertising, SonicOS Enhanced offers the option
of enabling Advanced Routing Services (ARS). Advanced Routing Services provides full
advertising and listening support for the Routing Information Protocol (RIPv1 - RFC1058) and
(RIPv2 - RFC2453), and Open Shortest Path First (OSPFv2 – RFC2328). Advanced Routing
Service should only be enabled by those environments requiring support for either or both of
these dynamic routing protocols.
of enabling Advanced Routing Services (ARS). Advanced Routing Services provides full
advertising and listening support for the Routing Information Protocol (RIPv1 - RFC1058) and
(RIPv2 - RFC2453), and Open Shortest Path First (OSPFv2 – RFC2328). Advanced Routing
Service should only be enabled by those environments requiring support for either or both of
these dynamic routing protocols.
RIP and OSPF are Interior Gateway Protocols (IGP) that are both widely used by networks of
various sizes to automate the process of route distribution. RIP is commonly used within
smaller networks, while OSPF is used by larger networks, although network size should not be
the only factor used to determine the appropriateness of one protocol over the other – network
speed, interoperability requirements, and relative overall complexity, for example, should also
be considered. RIPv1 and RIPv2 are both supported by ARS, the largest differences between
the two being that RIPv2 supports VLSM (Variable Length Subnet Masks), authentication, and
routing updates. The following table illustrates the major differences between RIPv1, RIPv2,
and OSPFv2:
various sizes to automate the process of route distribution. RIP is commonly used within
smaller networks, while OSPF is used by larger networks, although network size should not be
the only factor used to determine the appropriateness of one protocol over the other – network
speed, interoperability requirements, and relative overall complexity, for example, should also
be considered. RIPv1 and RIPv2 are both supported by ARS, the largest differences between
the two being that RIPv2 supports VLSM (Variable Length Subnet Masks), authentication, and
routing updates. The following table illustrates the major differences between RIPv1, RIPv2,
and OSPFv2:
RIPv1
RIPv2
OSPFv2
Protocol metrics
Distance Vector
Distance Vector
Link State
Maximum Hops
15
15
Unlimited
Routing table
updates
updates
Full table
broadcast
periodically,
slower
convergence
broadcast
periodically,
slower
convergence
Full table
broadcast or
multicast
periodically,
slower
convergence
broadcast or
multicast
periodically,
slower
convergence
Link state
advertisement
multicasts,
triggered by
changes, fast
convergence
advertisement
multicasts,
triggered by
changes, fast
convergence
Subnet Sizes
Supported
Supported
Only class-based
(a/b/c) subnets
support
(a/b/c) subnets
support
Class-based only
VLSM
Autonomous
system topology
system topology
Indivisible and flat
Indivisible and flat
Area based,
allowing for
segmentation and
aggregation
allowing for
segmentation and
aggregation