EIGRP RECAP;
Part of mastering EIGRP for your CCNP
ROUTE (640-902) exam is knowing the fundamentals - and while you're
familiar with the multicasting address reserved for EIGRP, you might not
know there are actually five EIGRP packet types.
Let's take a look at each and the individual purchase each one serves.
EIGRP uses the Reliable Transport
Protocol (RTP) to handle the guaranteed and reliable delivery of EIGRP
packets to neighbors. "Guaranteed and reliable" sounds a lot like TCP,
but the two are quite different in how they operate. Not all EIGRP
packets are going to be sent reliably.
EIGRP uses five packet types. You're likely familiar with Hello
packets, used for neighbor discovery and to keep existing neighbor
relationships alive. EIGRP Hello packets are multicast to 224.0.0.10.
Acknowledgement packets
themselves are simply hello packets that contain no data. Neither
Hello nor Ack packets use RTP, and are therefore considered unreliable.
Update
packets are sent to new neighbors to allow the neighbor to build an
accurate routing and topology table, and are also sent when a change in
the network occurs. Update packets are generally multicast packets, but
there's one important exception that you'll read about later in this
tutorial.
Query packets are sent when a router loses a successor route and has no feasible successor ("DUAL Query").
Reply packets are sent
in response to query packets, and a reply packet indicates that a new
route to the destination has been found. Update, query, and reply
packets all use RTP and are considered reliable.
To see how many of these packets have passed through a router, run show ip eigrp traffic.
R1#show ip eigrp traffic
IP-EIGRP Traffic Statistics for process 100
Hellos sent/received: 2/2
Updates sent/received: 13/4
Queries sent/received: 0/0
Replies sent/received: 0/0
Acks sent/received: 0/2
Input queue high water mark 1, 0 drops
SIA-Queries sent/received: 0/0
SIA-Replies sent/received: 0/0
IP-EIGRP Traffic Statistics for process 100
Hellos sent/received: 2/2
Updates sent/received: 13/4
Queries sent/received: 0/0
Replies sent/received: 0/0
Acks sent/received: 0/2
Input queue high water mark 1, 0 drops
SIA-Queries sent/received: 0/0
SIA-Replies sent/received: 0/0
To review: Hello and ACK packets are unreliable. Reply, Query, and Update packets are reliable.
Before EIGRP routers can exchange
routes, they have to become neighbors - and some of the packets we just
discussed are vital to that adjacency process.
Let's take a look at an EIGRP adjacency and how the packets we just discussed are part of this process.
In
the following example, R1 has just had EIGRP enabled on a Serial
interface. R1 will send an EIGRP Hello packet out that interface in an
attempt to find potential neighbors. EIGRP Hello packets are multicast
to 224.0.0.10.
The downstream router R2 receives
this Hello and check it to verify that certain values in the Hello
packet - including the Autonomous System number - match those on R2.
If those values match, R2
responds with an EIGRP Update packet, which contains all the
EIGRP-derived routes that R2 knows. (R1 will also receive a Hello
packet, multicast from R2.)
Note the EIGRP Update packet going back to R1 is a unicast.
Generally, EIGRP Update packets
are multicast to 224.0.0.10, just as EIGRP Hello packets are. This
particular situation is an exception to that rule - during the initial
exchange of routes between two new EIGRP neighbors, update packets are
unicast rather than multicast.
Finally, R1 will send an EIGRP
Acknowledgement packet to let R2 know the routes in the Update packet
were received. R1 will also send an Update packet of its own, unicast
to R2, containing all EIGRP routes R1 has. R2 will respond with an ack
of its own.
Now that we've got our adjacency, the real fun begins!
I have got the EIGRP lab up and running and will look at some debugs tomorrow :0)
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