RIP Routes May Have a Different Metric Than Expected (169416)
The information in this article applies to:
- Microsoft Windows NT Server 4.0
- Microsoft Routing and Remote Access Service Update for Windows NT Server 4.0
This article was previously published under Q169416 SUMMARY
Routes learned from the Routing Information Protocol (RIP) may not have the
metrics that you would expect. When a Windows NT Router is advertising a
non-RIP route over RIP, it will always be advertised with a metric of 2.
MORE INFORMATION
A metric is a value that shows how desirable a particular route is. Other
routing protocols give different meanings to the metric. Because the
meanings for the metric are different, the metrics cannot be directly
converted. When RIP advertises a non-RIP route, RIP will advertise the
route with a metric of 2.
A simple example is a Windows NT router advertising its local subnet
routes. Routes for the locally attached LANs will show in the route table
with a metric of 1 and the Protocol is Local. This local route will be
advertised to a neighbor RIP router with the metric of 2. This neighbor
router will then increase the metric for all routes by one to reflect its
own hop count to the destination. In this neighbor's route table, you will
see the metric of 3 when you would expect to see the metric of 2.
Modification Type: | Major | Last Reviewed: | 8/9/2001 |
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Keywords: | kbnetwork KB169416 |
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