Home  
Monday, 05 January 2009
Home arrow 2500 Series arrow How to Configure RIP in a Cisco Router
Home
Router How-To List
Downloads
Links
Advanced Search
Contact Us
Cisco Routers
All Router Series
1800 Series
2500 Series
2600 Series
Hints and Tips
Ads


Login Form
Username

Password

Remember me
Password Reminder
No account yet? Create one
Subscribe To Our Feed
Get Weekly Email Updates






Bookmark this page on

Subscribe with Bloglines
Add to My Yahoo!


Add to Technorati Favorites
View blog reactions
How to Configure RIP in a Cisco Router | Print |  E-mail
User Rating: / 6
PoorBest 
Cisco Routers - General
Written by Mohammed Alani   
Monday, 02 April 2007

When would you need this: When you need to implement a routing protocol for a small network and you need the configuration to be simple. Routing Information Protocol is the simplest that it can get.

Special Requirements: None.


1. The first thing to do is to enable the RIP protocol on the router with the ‘router rip’ command.

Router(config)#router rip

2. Identify the networks to be advertised using the ‘network XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX’ command. Using this command, you need to identify only the networks that are directly connected to the router.

Router(config-router)#network 192.168.0.0

And remember to write only the supernet if you have a group of subnets. For example, if you have the following subnets connected to the router (172.16.0.0, 172.16.1.0, and 172.16.2.0). You can put them all in single ‘network’ command like this:

Router(config-router)#network 172.16.0.0

You can notice that only three subnets of the supernet are connected to the router, and despite that, we wrote the supernet in the ‘network’ command. The router is intelligent enough to figure it out.

3. If you need to adjust the timers (update, invalid, holddown, and flush timers) use the ‘timers basic’ command. All the four parameters of this command; update, invalid, holddwon, and flush timer consequently, are in seconds.

Router(config-router)#timers basic 30 180 180 240

The example above is set with the default values of the RIP timers. Remember to keep the relativity of the timer values. Always keep it n 6n 6n 8n. If, for example, you set the update timer to 40, you need to make the other timers 240 240 320 consequently.

4. You will need to stop the updates from being broadcasted to the internet. For this purpose, use the ‘passive interface’ command. This command prevents the interface from forwarding any RIP broadcasts, but keeps the interface listening to what others are saying in RIP.

Router(config-router)#passive-interface Fa0/0

5. RIP, by nature, sends updates as broadcast. If the router is connected through non-broadcast networks (like FrameRelay), you will need to tell RIP to send the updates on this network as unicast. This is achieved by the ‘neighbor’ command.

Router(config-router)#neighbor XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX

Where XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX is the IP address of the neighbor.

6. Cisco's implementation of RIP Version 2 supports authentication, key management, route summarization, classless interdomain routing (CIDR), and variable-length subnet masks (VLSMs). By default, the software receives RIP Version 1 and Version 2 packets, but sends only Version 1 packets. You can configure the software to receive and send only Version 1 packets. Alternatively, you can configure the software to receive and send only Version 2 packets. To do so, use the ‘version’ command.

Router(config-router)#version 2

And if you like to stick to version one, just replace the 2 in the command above with 1.

Furthermore, you can control the versions of the updates sent and received on each interface to have more flexibility in support both versions. This is achieved by the ‘ip rip send version’ and ‘ip rip receive version’ commands.

Router(config-if)#ip rip send version 2

Router(config-if)#ip rip receive version 1

7. Check the RIP configuration using the ‘show ip route’, ‘show ip protocols’, and ‘debug ip rip’ commands.

 


Comments
GREAT
Written by OLUSOLA on 2007-04-16 11:47:16
I found this information so helpful.
Thank you
Written by RouterGeek on 2007-04-16 12:28:07
OLUSOLA, 
Thank you for stopping by. I am glad that you found this site useful.

Only registered users can write comments.
Please login or register.

Thank you for leaving a comment

RouterGeek Store
Polls
Did you find the information you needed here?
  
Bookmark Us
 
 
Who's Online
We have 12 guests online
Hit Count

Latest Articles
Popular Articles