Interior Gateway Protocol (IGP)
Interior Gateway Protocols (IGP) are routing protocols that we (mostly) use on internal networks. Examples of IGPs are:
Links to this page:
- BGP - Accumulated IGP metric
- BGP - attributes and path selection
- BGP - redistributing iBGP routes into an IGP
- BGP Equal cost multipath
- BGP and route tagging
- BGP backdoor route
- BGP hold timer
- BGP installing a BGP-learned route into the routing table
- BGP peering redundancy using loopbacks
- BGP why do we need an IGP for BGP to work
- EIGRP
- Equal-cost Multi-path routing
- GRE - Recursive routing error
- IS-IS - DIS and Pseudonode
- IS-IS
- MPLS - what is seamless MPLS
- MPLS LSR ID
- MPLS-TE - why are IGPs necessary
- OSPF Why it is not suitable for use on the Internet
- OSPF
- RIP
- Routing - Difference between IGPs and EGPs
- Routing NX-OS passive-interface default