Most Complete Teaching of EIGRP by Arash Deljoo
Learn the fundamentals of EIGRP, an advanced routing protocol used for automating routing decisions. Perfect for network engineers seeking to enhance their skills.
What you’ll learn
- EIGRP Fundamentals and Basic Configuration
- EIGRP Neighborship Process
- EIGRP Path Metric Calculation
- EIGRP Convergence
- EIGRP Load-Balancing
- EIGRP Summarization
- EIGRP Stub Router and Site
- EIGRP WAN Considerations
- EIGRP Filtering with ACL and IP Prefix-List
- EIGRP Filtering with Route-Map and Gateway
- EIGRP Offset List
- Troubleshooting EIGRP for IPv4
- EIGRP for IPv4 Trouble Tickets
- EIGRP for IPv6 (EIGRPv6)
- EIGRPv6 and Named EIGRP Trouble Tickets
- EIGRP OTP – Full Mesh
- EIGRP OTP – Route Reflector
- EIGRP OTP – Redundant Remote Routers
- IPv6 EIGRP OTP – Full Mesh
- IPv6 EIGRP OTP – Route Reflector
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Enhanced Interior Gateway Routing Protocol (EIGRP) is an advanced distance-vector routing protocol that is used on a computer network for automating routing decisions and configuration. The protocol was designed by Cisco Systems as a proprietary protocol, available only on Cisco routers. In 2013 Cisco decided to allow other vendors freely implement limited version of EIGRP with some of its associated features such as High Availability (HA), while withholding other EIGRP features such as EIGRP stub, needed for DMVPN and large-scale campus deployment, exclusively for themselves. Information needed for implementation was published with informational status as RFC 7868 in 2016, which did not make it into an Internet Standards Track specification and allowed Cisco to retain control of the EIGRP protocol.
EIGRP is used on a router to share routes with other routers within the same autonomous system. Unlike other well known routing protocols, such as RIP, EIGRP only sends incremental updates, reducing the workload on the router and the amount of data that needs to be transmitted.
EIGRP replaced the Interior Gateway Routing Protocol (IGRP) in 1993. One of the major reasons for this was the change to classless IPv4 addresses in the Internet Protocol, which IGRP could not support.
Who this course is for:
- Network Engineers
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