Day 01 - Routing
The video primarily covers a detailed discussion on various routing protocols and concepts in networking. Here are the key points discussed:
- Static Routing:
- Definition and the concept of manually adding a route.
- Types of static routing: directly connected, recursive, fully specified, and floating.
- Disadvantages of directly connected static routes, such as needing an ARP entry for every destination.
- Dynamic Routing Protocols:
- Introduction to EIGRP (Enhanced Interior Gateway Routing Protocol) and OSPF (Open Shortest Path First).
- Discussion on the BGP (Border Gateway Protocol).
- Proxy ARP:
- Explanation of proxy ARP and its role when routers do not know the destination IP.
- Example scenarios involving multiple routers and hosts, explaining how packets are routed using static routes and proxy ARP.
- Practical lab setup for demonstrating proxy ARP and static routes using various commands and configurations.
- Routing Tables and ARP Entries:
- How routers use ARP requests and maintain ARP tables.
- The impact of disabling proxy ARP and its effect on network communication.
- Advantages and Disadvantages:
- Recursive routing's double lookups and its single ARP entry advantage.
- Fully specified routing combining the benefits of directly connected and recursive routing without double lookups.
- Floating Static Routes:
- Use in backup scenarios, providing alternative paths if the primary route fails.
- Application in HSRP (Hot Standby Router Protocol) and emergency scenarios.
- EIGRP Details:
- EIGRP as a distance vector protocol that provides direction and hop count to destinations.
- Key attributes of EIGRP: AD values (90 for internal, 170 for external), protocol number (88), OSI layer (network layer), multicast address (224.0.0.10), and algorithm (DUAL - Diffusing Update Algorithm).
- Interactive Q&A:
- Questions from the participants about routing concepts and practical applications.
- Clarifications on static routes configuration, proxy ARP operations, and EIGRP attributes.
The session focused on ensuring a thorough understanding of static and dynamic routing, the role of ARP in routing, and practical configurations for efficient network management.