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Cisco ME 3800X and 3600X Switch Software Configuration Guide
OL-23400-01
Chapter 29 Configuring IP Unicast Routing
Configuring RIP
Use the no ip routing global configuration command to disable routing.
This example shows how to enable IP routing using RIP as the routing protocol:
Switch#
configure terminal
Enter configuration commands, one per line. End with CNTL/Z.
Switch(config)#
ip routing
Switch(config)#
router rip
Switch(config-router)#
network 10.0.0.0
Switch(config-router)#
end
You can now set up parameters for the selected routing protocols as described in these sections:
•
Configuring RIP, page 29-17
•
Configuring OSPF, page 29-22
•
Configuring EIGRP, page 29-33
•
Configuring BGP, page 29-41
•
Configuring ISO CLNS Routing, page 29-61
•
Configuring BFD for OSPF, page 29-74
•
Configuring Protocol-Independent Features, page 29-93
(optional)
Configuring RIP
The Routing Information Protocol (RIP) is an interior gateway protocol (IGP) used in small,
homogeneous networks. It is a distance-vector routing protocol that uses broadcast User Datagram
Protocol (UDP) data packets to exchange routing information. You can find detailed information about
RIP in IP Routing Fundamentals, published by Cisco Press.
Using RIP, the switch sends routing information updates (advertisements) every 30 seconds. If a router
does not receive an update from another router for 180 seconds or more, it marks the routes served by
that router as unusable. If there is still no update after 240 seconds, the router removes all routing table
entries for the non-updating router.
RIP uses hop counts to rate the value of different routes. The hop count is the number of routers that can
be traversed in a route. A directly connected network has a hop count of zero; a network with a hop count
of 16 is unreachable. This small range (0 to 15) makes RIP unsuitable for large networks.
Step 3
router ip_routing_protocol
Specify an IP routing protocol. This step might include other
commands, such as specifying the networks to route with the
network (RIP) router configuration command. For information on
specific protocols, see sections later in this chapter and to the Cisco
IOS IP Configuration Guide, Release 12.2.
Step 4
end
Return to privileged EXEC mode.
Step 5
show running-config
Verify your entries.
Step 6
copy running-config startup-config
(Optional) Save your entries in the configuration file.
Command
Purpose