
Chapter 7 WAN screens
117
Nortel Business Secure Router 222 Configuration — Basics
RIP Direction
With RIP (Routing Information Protocol), a router can exchange
routing information with other routers. The
RIP Direction
field
controls the sending and receiving of RIP packets.
Choose
Both
,
None
,
In Only
or
Out Only
.
When set to
Both
or
Out Only
, the Business Secure Router
broadcasts its routing table periodically.
When set to
Both
or
In Only
, the Business Secure Router
incorporates RIP information that it receives.
When set to
None
, the Business Secure Router does not send any
RIP packets and ignores any RIP packets received.
By default,
RIP Direction
is set to
Both
.
RIP Version
The
RIP Version
field controls the format and the broadcasting
method of the RIP packets that the Business Secure Router sends
(it recognizes both formats when receiving).
Choose
RIP-1
,
RIP-2B
or
RIP-2M
.
RIP-1
is universally supported; but
RIP-2
carries more information.
RIP-1 is probably adequate for most networks, unless you have an
unusual network topology. Both
RIP-2B
and
RIP-2M
sends the
routing data in RIP-2 format; the difference being that RIP-2B uses
subnet broadcasting while RIP-2M uses multicasting. Multicasting
can reduce the load on nonrouter machines since they generally do
not listen to the RIP multicast address and so do not receive the
RIP packets. However, if one router uses multicasting, then all
routers on your network must use multicasting, also. By default, the
RIP Version
field is set to
RIP-1
.
Multicast
Choose
None
(default),
IGMP-V1
or
IGMP-V2
. IGMP (Internet
Group Multicast Protocol) is a network layer protocol used to
establish membership in a Multicast group—it is not used to carry
user data. IGMP version 2 (RFC 2236) is an improvement over
version 1 (RFC 1112) but IGMP version 1 is still in wide use. If you
want to read more detailed information about interoperability
between IGMP version 2 and version 1, see sections 4 and 5 of
Internet Group Management Protocol (RFC 2236).
Call Schedule
(PPPoE and PPTP
encapsulation)
Apply call schedule sets for this remote node. Use the
Call
Schedule
screens to configure call schedule sets (see
“Call scheduling screens,” on page 385
Windows
Networking
(NetBIOS over
TCP/IP):
Windows Networking (NetBIOS over TCP/IP): NetBIOS (Network
Basic Input/Output System) are TCP or UDP packets that enable a
computer to connect to and communicate with a LAN. For some
dial-up services, such as PPPoE or PPTP, NetBIOS packets cause
unwanted calls.
Table 22
WAN: IP
Label
Description
Summary of Contents for BSR222
Page 28: ...28 Tables NN47922 500 ...
Page 50: ...50 Chapter 2 Introducing the WebGUI NN47922 500 ...
Page 66: ...66 Chapter 3 Wizard setup NN47922 500 ...
Page 92: ...92 Chapter 5 System screens NN47922 500 ...
Page 104: ...104 Chapter 6 LAN screens NN47922 500 ...
Page 154: ...154 Chapter 9 Static Route screens NN47922 500 ...
Page 196: ...196 Chapter 11 Firewall screens NN47922 500 ...
Page 212: ...212 Chapter 13 VPN NN47922 500 Figure 68 Summary IP Policies ...
Page 256: ...256 Chapter 13 VPN NN47922 500 Figure 82 VPN Client Termination advanced ...
Page 260: ...260 Chapter 13 VPN NN47922 500 ...
Page 264: ...264 Chapter 14 Certificates NN47922 500 Figure 84 My Certificates ...
Page 290: ...290 Chapter 14 Certificates NN47922 500 Figure 95 Trusted remote host details ...
Page 314: ...314 Chapter 16 IEEE 802 1x NN47922 500 ...
Page 318: ...318 Chapter 17 Authentication server NN47922 500 Figure 107 Local User database edit ...
Page 326: ...326 Chapter 17 Authentication server NN47922 500 ...
Page 374: ...374 Chapter 20 Logs Screens NN47922 500 Figure 151 Log settings ...
Page 384: ...384 Chapter 20 Logs Screens NN47922 500 ...
Page 402: ...402 Chapter 22 Maintenance NN47922 500 Figure 170 Restart screen ...