Stub network

Stub network

A stub network is a somewhat casual term describing a computer network, or part of an internetwork, with no knowledge of other networks, that will typically send much or all of its non-local traffic out via a single path, with the network aware only of a default route to non-local destinations. As a practical analogy, think of an island which is connected to the rest of the world through a bridge and no other path is available either through air or sea. Continuing this analogy, the island might have more than one physical bridge to the mainland, but the set of bridges still represents only one logical path.

* An enterprise LAN that connects to the corporate network by only one router, or multiple default routers connected to the same logical upstream destination.
* A single LAN which never carries packets between multiple routers connected to it. All traffic is to and/or from local hosts. The routers will only route packets into the LAN if it's destined for the LAN, and out from the LAN if it originated on the LAN).
* A person, or workgroup, who is connected to an ISP, by only one router, is a stub network with respect to the ISP. This stub network is part of the ISP's autonomous system, discussed below.
* An OSPF stub area is one which only has a default route to the rest of the OSPF routing domain . Such an area may have more than one router, but these routers will only know about the default route to the outside.
* A stub autonomous system that is connected to only one other autonomous system, through which it gains access to the Internet. This is also called a stub AS, which characterize the great majority of AS connected to the Internet. [ [http://thyme.apnic.net Weekly Routing Report] ,Routing Analysis Role Account] as of June 30, 2007, there were 224622 routes seen by the APNIC router. These came from 25577 autonomous systems, of which only 74 were transit-only and 22272 were stub/origin-only. 3305 autonomous systems provided some level of transit.

References

See also

* Multihoming
* IP transit
* Peering


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Stub — may refer to: * Stub or stubb, a low pollard, a tree cut and allowed to regrow from the trunk (the origin of most other meanings) *Method stub, in computer programming, a piece of code used to stand in for some other programming functionality… …   Wikipedia

  • Network Admission Control — (NAC) refers to Cisco s version of Network Access Control, which restricts access to the network based on identity or security posture. When a network device (switch, router, wireless access point, DHCP server, etc.) is configured for NAC, it can …   Wikipedia

  • Network 7 — logo from Series 2 Format Youth current affairs show Created by Jane Hewland, Janet Street Porter …   Wikipedia

  • Network segmentation — in computer networking is the act or profession of splitting a computer network into subnetworks, each being a network segment or network layer. Advantages of such splitting are primarily for boosting performance and improving security.… …   Wikipedia

  • Network Load Balancing Services — (NLBS) is a Microsoft implementation of clustering and load balancing that is intended to provide high availability and high reliability, as well as high scalability. NLBS is intended for applications with relatively small data sets that rarely… …   Wikipedia

  • Network information system — (abbreviation: NIS) is an information system for managing networks, such as electricity network, water supply network, gas supply network, or telecommunications network. NIS may manage all data relevant to the network, e.g. all components and… …   Wikipedia

  • Network Audio System — Developer(s) Jon Trulson Stable release 1.9.3 / May 13, 2011 Written in C Operating system Linux, FreeBSD, Windows, etc …   Wikipedia

  • Network World — is a weekly IT publication that provides news and information to network executives. The company is headquartered in Framingham, Massachusetts, United States. Network World was started in 1986 by parent company International Data Group as a spin… …   Wikipedia

  • Network provisioning — or service mediation are terms referring to provisioning of the customer’s services to the network elements, mostly used in the telecommunication industry. It requires the existence of networking equipment and depends on network planning and… …   Wikipedia

  • Network cloaking — is a technology that makes a protected network invisible to malicious external traffic, while allowing complete and uninterrupted access for legitimate users. Network cloaking is accomplished via a promiscuous bridge with firewall functionality,… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”