Difference between revisions of "Border Gateway Protocol"

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The '''Border Gateway Protocol''' (usually known by its acronym '''BGP''') is a [[routing protocol]] in the [[TCP/IP]] [[protocol suite]]; specifically, it is an [[External Gateway Protocol|EGP]], used for providing the information needed for doing [[path selection]] between [[Autonomous System]]s.
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The '''Border Gateway Protocol''' (usually known by its acronym '''BGP''') is a [[routing protocol]] in the [[TCP/IP]] [[protocol suite]]; specifically, it is an [[exterior gateway protocol|EGP]], used for providing the information needed for doing [[path selection]] across a connected group of [[Autonomous System]]s.
  
It is a [[routing architecture|Destination Vector]] protocol; the data it carries are [[routing table]] entries. It detects and prevents [[routing loop]]s by tagging each table entry with the complete path.
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It is a [[routing architecture|Destination Vector]] protocol; the data it carries are [[routing table]] entries. It detects and prevents [[routing loop]]s by tagging each table entry with the complete path; this variant of DV is called '''Path Vector'''.
  
 
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[[Category: Networking]]
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[[Category: TCP/IP Protocols]]

Latest revision as of 22:59, 13 December 2018

The Border Gateway Protocol (usually known by its acronym BGP) is a routing protocol in the TCP/IP protocol suite; specifically, it is an EGP, used for providing the information needed for doing path selection across a connected group of Autonomous Systems.

It is a Destination Vector protocol; the data it carries are routing table entries. It detects and prevents routing loops by tagging each table entry with the complete path; this variant of DV is called Path Vector.