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CMPE 151 Routing Marc Mosko Talk Outline Routing basics Why segment networks? IP address/subnet mask The gateway decision based on dest IP address default gateway and static routing gateway discovery (DHCP, IDRP RFC1256) dynamic routing A simple routing protocol RIPv1 All the problems w/ RIP quick RIPv2 differences Demo RIP commands: netstat, route, ip route 2 Why segment networks All systems see all others Broadcast traffic causes load (ARP, etc.) Security (e.g. block Windows file sharing) Over wide-area Want to eliminate L2 broadcasts Different administrative units want different address spaces L3 provides glue between different link technologies, such as Ethernet and DSL. 3 Classful IP addresses 5 classes A: 7-bit net/24-bit host 0xx 0 - 126 Loopback 127 B: 14-bit net/16-bit host 10x 128 - 191 C: 21-bit net/8-bit host 110x 192 - 223 D: multicast 1110x 224 - 239 E: experimental 1111x 240 – 254 Broadcast 255.255.255.255 No subnet mask used. Bit-size of fields defined by address prefix. 4 Classful examples A networks 10.1.2.3 net=10, host = 1.2.3 B networks 172.16.8.7 net=172.16, host = 8.7 C networks 192.168.4.5 net=192.168.4, host = 5 D network 224.3.4.5 multicast group 224.3.4.5 5 Classful IP addresses What’s the problem? Not enough networks A = 125 usable B = 16k usable C = 2M usable 2M might seem like a lot, but is not enough for whole world. Point-to-point links would take up a whole class C. No one is going to put 16M hosts on a class A. 6 Enter Classless IP IP address is a 64-bit value: IP and mask. a.b.c.d / 255.255.255.0 a.b.c.d / 24 The mask specifies the network part of the address, used by routers. What is left over (inverse mask) is used by hosts. Example: IP = 10.24.17.198 / 255.255.248.0 0A.18.11.C6 FF.FF.F8.00 0A.18.10.00 Network Host 0A.18.11.C6 00.00.07.FF 00.00.01.C6 = 10.24.16.0 = 0.0.1.198 7 The gateway decision Host IP: 10.0.64.1 / 16 Dest IP: 10.0.65.2 What should host do with packet? 10.0.64.1 & 255.255.0.0 = 10.0.0.0 10.0.65.2 & 255.255.0.0 = 10.0.0.0 Same network, host should ARP and deliver locally. 8 The gateway decision (2) Host IP: 10.0.64.1 / 16 Dest IP: 10.1.65.2 What should host do with packet? 10.0.64.1 & 255.255.0.0 = 10.0.0.0 10.1.65.2 & 255.255.0.0 = 10.1.0.0 Different network, host should send packet to default gateway for routing. 9 Common masks Masks 255.255.255.0 255.255.255.128 255.255.255.192 255.255.255.224 255.255.255.240 255.255.255.248 255.255.255.252 255.255.255.254 255.255.255.255 0 0+128 128 + 64 192 + 32 224 + 16 240 + 8 248 + 4 252 + 2 254 + 1 /24 /25 /26 /27 /28 /29 /30 /31 /32 256 hosts 128 hosts 64 hosts 32 hosts 16 hosts 8 hosts 4 hosts not usable single host Learn them There’s only 7 – just memorize it Or, use the addition trick in column 2 10 Miscellaneous Reserved numbers Why is /31 not usable? 0 = ``this net’’ and all-1s = broadcast In /30, 4 addresses, but only 2 usable, etc. Examples 10.7.5.16/29 = 8 addresses, 6 usable 10.7.5.16 = 0 ``this net’’ address 10.7.5.23 = all-1s broadcast 10.7.5.23 & 0.0.0.7 00010111 00000111 (inverse mask for host part) .....111 There are other rules about subnet zero (not discussed) 11 IP address summary IP address & subnet mask Hosts and routers know both. Given IP, Mask, and destination IP, a host can determine if local delivery or send to gateway. The 0 and all-1s addresses reserved. Just about everything is classless routing nowa-days. 12 Gateway discovery How does a host know which gateway? Static: put in /etc/gateways Simple, but not resilient to failures. DHCP/BOOTP Better administration, can be changed, but still sensitive to gateway failure. IRDP (RFC 1256) Hosts can send a query to the network and available gateways send responses. Allows automatic re-configuration around failures. Routing protocol Host can run a routing protocol and learn full routing information. Can be a ``stub’’ that does not forward. 13 Dynamic routing What is a routing protocol? Exchange reachability information Prevent loops Networks at site http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/iprouting/chapter/pipr_0401.gif 14 Routing Table Information stored (at minimum) Destination (likely w/ subnet mask) Next-hop to reach network Distance (or something else for loop-freedom) Status Destination 172.16.50.0 172.16.250.0 172.16.252.0 172.16.1.0 192.168.1.0 172.16.100.0 172.16.251.0 Interface E0 S0 S1 S0 S0 S1 S1 Nexthop 172.16.50.1 172.16.250.2 172.16.252.1 172.16.250.1 172.16.250.1 172.16.252.2 172.16.252.2 Distance 0 0 0 1 1 1 2 Chicago router Status CONN CONN CONN UP UP UP UP Timer ---0:00:02 0:00:02 0:00:14 0:00:14 15 Routing table example Destination 172.16.50.0 172.16.250.0 172.16.252.0 172.16.1.0 192.168.1.0 172.16.100.0 172.16.251.0 Interface E0 S0 S1 S0 S0 S1 S1 Nexthop 172.16.50.1 172.16.250.2 172.16.252.1 172.16.250.1 172.16.250.1 172.16.252.2 172.16.252.2 Distance 0 0 0 1 1 1 2 Chicago router Status CONN CONN CONN UP UP UP UP Timer ---0:00:02 0:00:02 0:00:14 0:00:14 16 A simple routing protocol Routing Information Protocol (RIP) Very old protocol (for computers!). Each node periodically broadcasts routing table out each interface. For each received broadcast, for each destination, pick next hop that has the shortest distance. Distance is from 0 to 15. Distance 16 = infinity (not reachable). RIP is in the class of: Distributed Bellman-Ford Distance Vector 17 RIP and subnet mask Does not use subnet masks Exception: If the router is configured with a subnet mask, it will assume that mask for the network. In picture, 172.16.0.0 is class B. But is being used as a class C. As long as all routers have /24 mask, RIP will “do the right thing”. 18 Problems with RIP (1) Based on hop count NY would choose 56k line to reach Ames because it is 1 hop. The 2-hop T1 lines (1.5 Mbps) would be better. 19 Problems with RIP (2) Loops failure failure Net 1 Time 1 30 60 70 90 120 150 … 510 540 Router A Dist NH 0 self 0 self 0 self failure failure failure failure A Router B Dist NH -1 A 1 A 1 A 3 C 3 C 5 C … 15 C 16 C B Route C Dist NH --2 B 2 B 2 B 4 B 4 B … 16 B 16 B C 20 Problems with RIP (3) What would fix problem? Don’t advertise out I/F what you get in I/F (split horizon) When change to NH, send advert right away If I/F goes down, poison route (poison reverse) Router A Dist NH 0 self 0 self 0 self failure failure failure failure Time 1 30 60 70 90 120 150 … 510 540 Net 1 failure failure A Router B Dist NH -1 A 1 A 1 A 3 C 3 C 5 C … 15 C 16 C B Route C Dist NH --2 B 2 B 2 B 4 B 4 B … 16 B 16 B C 21 Problems with RIP (4) Summary Count-to-infinity It is built in to RIP. You cannot completely remove it. It is in by design. RIP does not exchange enough information to be loop-free in all cases, so it must detect loops by C2I. Split-horizon & poison reverse Only work for short loops. You can still have long cycles with loops, which C2I will eventually remove. 22 RIP version 2 (RIPv2) Add subnet masks Triggered updates (faster convergence) Authentication Still has loops and C2I Is used today in small networks 23 RIP Demo 192.168.2.0/24 modesto 192.168.4.0/24 fresno .1 turlock 192.168.3.0/24 .2 switch 192.168.11.0/24 PC 24 UNIX routing support routed = RIP mrouted = multicast DVMRP Gated and Zebra = modern protocols Commands route add ip route (linux) netstat –nr arp -a route –nv monitor /etc/gateways 25 Other topics (whiteboard) Distance vector vs. link state OSPF Can DV be loop free? (yes!) What is BGP4? Fault-tolerant network design Two NICs in server Two switches Two Routers Two ISPs How to make it all work together? 26