Rip; Vrrp - ORiNG RGS-R9004GP+ME-HV User Manual

Rack mount managed gigabit ethernet switch
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ZP5 - USSR Zone 4
ZP6 - USSR Zone 5
WAST - West Australian Standard
CCT - China Coast, USSR Zone 7
JST - Japan Standard, USSR
Zone 8
EAST - East Australian Standard
GST
Guam Standard, USSR Zone 9
IDLE - International Date Line
NZST - New Zealand Standard
NZT - New Zealand

5.1.7 RIP

RIP (Routing Information Protocol) is one of the protocols which may be used by routers to
exchange network topology information. It is characterized as an "interior" gateway protocol,
and is typically used in small to medium-sized networks. A router running RIP sends the
contents of its routing table to each of its adjacent routers every 30 seconds. When a route is
removed from the routing table it is flagged as unusable by the receiving routers after 180
seconds, and removed from their tables after an additional 120 seconds. You can choose to
enable or disable RIP in the section.

5.1.8 VRRP

A VRRP (Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol) is a computer networking protocol aimed to
eliminate the single point of failure by automatically assigning available IP routers to
participating hosts. Using a virtual router ID (VRID) address and virtual router IP (VRIP)
address to represent itself, a virtual router consists of two or more physical routers, including
one master router and one or more backup routers. All routers in the virtual router group share
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RGS-R9004GP+ME User Manual
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