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August 1997

Steelhead's OSPF Routing


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In June, Microsoft launched a new version of its Multi-Protocol Routing (MPR), Routing and Remote Access Service (RRAS), formerly code-named Steelhead. Compared with the earlier version of MPR, a built-in service in Windows NT Server 4.0, RRAS has a rich set of routing and internetworking features that enable NT servers to route data over IP and IPX LANs and WANs. Some new MPR features in RRAS are Routing Information Protocol (RIP) 2.0 for IP, Open Shortest Path First (OSPF), IP and IPX packet filtering, and a dial-up router. In "Steelhead Swims into the Mainstream,", Mark Minasi describes RRAS's features.

Probably the most significant feature of RRAS is OSPF, a recommended routing protocol for TCP/IP networks. OSPF provides more efficient network convergence of routing information and less­and better­use of network bandwidth than traditional RIP. OSPF, however, is sophisticated and difficult to configure and manage in a midsize or large network. To design, implement, and manage an OSPF network successfully, you need a good understanding of OSPF and its architecture, and you must know how to configure it.

Some Routing Basics
Understanding and configuring Microsoft's powerful link-state routing procotol for TCP/IP networks that's part of the new Routing and Remote Access Service
To move from one network to another, a packet needs an intermediate connecting mechanism known as a router (or gateway in the IP literature). Every router has a routing table, which specifies the next router or network for the packet en route to a specific destination. When a router receives a packet, it checks its routing table for the packet's destination address to determine which attached router or network to send the packet to. Through this procedure, routers deliver a packet from a source to a destination.

Routers use two methods to generate and maintain routing: static routing and dynamic routing. In static routing, you manually create a routing table. This method works for a small, stable network, but not for a large network. If the network changes (e.g., if you add or remove a router or a link fails) you must manually modify the routing table, which is an administrative burden. In dynamic routing, a router maintains its routing table through a routing protocol. A routing protocol defines the way in which a group of routers exchanges routing information; a router chooses the best routing paths or routes to destination networks.

A group of routers and networks under the same administration using a common routing protocol is an autonomous system (AS); examples of ASs are networks within a company, a university, or an Internet Service Provider (ISP). The size of a network in an AS is not limited; an AS can be a small LAN with one router or a large network with hundreds of routers. A routing protocol used within an AS is an interior routing protocol (IRP), such as RIP and OSPF. A routing protocol for ASs to exchange routing information is an exterior routing protocol (ERP), such as exterior gateway protocol (EGP) and border gateway protocol (BGP).

A network interface in a router is attached to a network segment or link so that the router can communicate with its neighboring routers. A network interface has a cost, which reflects the bandwidth, length, and priority of the attached link, and reachable neighboring routers. A routing protocol uses the cost to find the best routes.

Advantages of OSPF
An AS has two kinds of IRP: distance-vector and link-state. A distance-vector routing protocol exemplifies a shortest-path algorithm; that is, it uses the total number of hops between a source and a destination as the cost variable in finding the best route. To continuously update their routing tables, routers using a distance-vector routing protocol exchange information in terms of distances from sources to destinations.

A link-state routing protocol, based on a link-state (or shortest-path-first) algorithm, works in a different way. Instead of exchanging distance information, routers exchange link states, or information about the router's network interfaces. A router maintains a link-state database, which is a map of the network. The router uses the link-state database to derive the network topology and establish a routing table. A router using a link-state routing protocol can compute a more accurate route than one using a distance-vector routing protocol. This process is like reading a detailed map to find the best route from one city to another.

RIP is the most widely used distance-vector routing protocol. In an RIP network, each router broadcasts its routing table to neighboring routers every 30 seconds. When a router receives a neighboring router's routing table, it updates its routing table and sends the updated table to neighboring routers. This procedure is repeated until all routers in the network have updated their routing tables and achieved network convergence.

RIP is simple but limited. You can easily implement an RIP network by enabling RIP on each router. However, RIP is not good for large networks or WANs. Broadcasting large routing tables in the network every 30 seconds consumes network bandwidth quickly. RIP also limits a network to a maximum of 15 hops.

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