On Sep 30, 2010, at 6:56 AM, Jack Bates wrote:
On 9/30/2010 8:46 AM, Owen DeLong wrote:
I have no NAT whatsoever in my home network. RIP is not at all useful in my scenario.
I have multiple routers in my home network. They use a combination of BGP and OSPFv3.
Except you must configure those things. The average home user cannot.
The average home user cannot configure RIP. What is your point?
If your network is of a scale where it exceeds the utility of static, then, it is almost certainly of a scale and topology where it exceeds the utility of RIP.
While it is possible for a router to create static routes automatically based on DHCPv6 assignment information, this has no loop prevention and is suboptimal depending on the configuration that things get plugged in. I'm not talking good network design here. I'm talking, buy box, plug in wherever it fits. Things should work.
RIP has no loop prevention and is suboptimal depending on the configuration that things get plugged in. RIP breaks more often than DHCP in my experience. Owen