CCIE IGP Protocols Enhanced Interior Gateway Routing Protocol
The eight-hour hands-on lab portion of the CCIE certification exams is the most rigorous part of becoming CCIE certified. These videos will give you problem-solving knowledge, techniques and confidence to solve scenarios like those given on the exams.
Meant to compliment our Cisco CCIE Certification Package, trainer Jeremy Cioara goes through a networking scenario in real-time with you. He starts at setup, then covers diagnosing the problem, implementing an effective solution and debugging along the way.
The Exterior Gateway Protocol (EGP) is a now obsolete routing protocol for the Internet originally specified in 1982 by Eric C. Rosen of Bolt, Beranek and Newman, and David L. Mills. It was first described in RFC 827 and formally specified in RFC 904 (1984). Not to be confused with EGPs in general (of which EGP and Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) are examples), EGP is a simple reachability protocol, and, unlike modern distance-vector and path-vector protocols, it is limited to tree-like topologies.
Enhanced Interior Gateway Routing Protocol (EIGRP) is an interior gateway protocol suited for many different topologies and media. In a well designed network, EIGRP scales well and provides extremely quick convergence times with minimal network traffic.
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