Library /sys$common/syshlp/net$mgmt_help.hlb routing *Conan The Librarian (sorry for the slow response - running on an old VAX) |
The Routing module implements the Network Routing layer described by the Digital Network Architecture. The entities that constitute the ROUTING module are listed below. The indention indicates the hierarchical relationships between the entities. Routing Destination area Destination node IP destination address Port Permitted neighbor EGP group EGP neighbor Circuit Adjacency IP address translation IP adjacency IP reachable address Reachable address The Routing module routes messages in the network and manages the message packet flow. The Routing module components provide the following functions: o Routing determines packet paths. A path is the sequence of connected nodes and links between a source node and a destination node. The combined knowledge of all the network Routing layer modules of all the nodes in a network is used to determine the existence of a path, and route the packet to its destination. The routing component at a routing node has the following specific functions: - Extracts and interprets the route header in a packet. - Performs packet forwarding based on the destination address. - Performs packet fragmentation where necessary. - Manages the characteristics of the path and if a node or link fails on a path, finds an alternate route. - Interfaces with the Network Routing Subnetwork Dependent sublayer to receive reports concerning a circuit or node that has failed or the subsequent recovery of a circuit or node. - Performs packet reassembly at the destination. - Returns error reports to the source where necessary, for instance when the destination is unreachable or when the packet would have needed to be fragmented but segmentation permitted was not set in the packet. Segmentation permitted is always set in data packets generated by DNA nodes. However, non-DNA nodes may do otherwise. o Congestion control manages the resources used at each packet switching node each node that permits route-through. o Packet lifetime control bounds the amount of time a packet can exist in the network. o Initialization identifies the adjacent node and the adjacent node's network routing layer. It also performs node verification, if required. o Dynamic circuit management -- determines when to dial calls, when to hang up calls, and on dynamically assigned circuits which DTE address to dial. It exists only on dynamically established data links. Whether or not a particular attribute or event of a routing module entity is supported often depends on the type of node on which the routing module is operating. The description of an attribute or event indicates the type of node for which the attribute or event is supported, using the following key: L1 - The attribute is supported only for Level 1 routers. L2 - The attribute is supported only for Level 2 routers. L1,L2 - The attribute is supported only for Level 1 or Level 2 routers. End - The attribute is supported only for end nodes. IP - The attribute is supported only for systems that support dual Routing that is, both OSI and IP routing. All - The attribute is supported by all implementations. The routing entity is the top-level entity in the Routing module hierarchy of entities. The Routing module controls the operation of network routing within a node.
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