Difference between revisions of "Exterior Gateway Protocol"
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− | The | + | The '''Exterior Gateway Protocol''' was a [[routing protocol]] used in the [[TCP/IP]] [[protocol suite]] for providing the information needed for doing [[path selection]] between a connected group of [[Autonomous System]]s, which was the first [[exterior gateway protocol]]. |
− | + | It is now obsolete, and no longer in use. It was a [[routing architecture|Destination Vector]] protocol; the data it carried was [[routing table]] entries. | |
− | It did not have any mechanism for detecting and preventing [[routing loop]]s; EGP was only intended for use in networks in which the graph of AS connectivity did not contain any cycles. The current EGP, [[Border Gateway Protocol|BGP]] does not have this limitation. | + | It did not have any mechanism for detecting and preventing [[routing loop]]s; EGP was only intended for use in networks in which the graph of AS connectivity did not contain any cycles. The current EGP, [[Border Gateway Protocol|BGP]], does not have this limitation. |
{{semi-stub}} | {{semi-stub}} | ||
− | [[Category: | + | [[Category: TCP/IP Protocols]] |
Latest revision as of 21:58, 13 December 2018
The Exterior Gateway Protocol was a routing protocol used in the TCP/IP protocol suite for providing the information needed for doing path selection between a connected group of Autonomous Systems, which was the first exterior gateway protocol.
It is now obsolete, and no longer in use. It was a Destination Vector protocol; the data it carried was routing table entries.
It did not have any mechanism for detecting and preventing routing loops; EGP was only intended for use in networks in which the graph of AS connectivity did not contain any cycles. The current EGP, BGP, does not have this limitation.