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Gateway-to-Gateway Protocol

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Gateway-to-Gateway Protocol (GGP) is an obsolete protocol defined for routing datagrams between Internet gateways.[1] It was first outlined in 1982.[2]

The Gateway-to-Gateway Protocol was designed as an Internet Protocol (IP) datagram service similar to the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and the User Datagram Protocol (UDP). However, it is classified as an Internet Layer protocol.[3]

GGP uses a minimum hop algorithm, in which it measures distance in router hops. A router is defined to be zero hops from directly connected networks, one hop from networks that are reachable through one other gateway. The protocol implements a distributed shortest-path methodology, and therefore requires global convergence of the routing tables after any change of link connectivity in the network.

Each GGP message has a field header that identifies the message type and the format of the remaining fields. Because only core routers participated in GGP, and because core routers were controlled by a central authority, other routers could not interfere with the exchange.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ RFC 1009, Requirements for Internet Gateways, R. Braden, J. Postel (June 1987), section 2.6.1
  2. ^ RFC 823, The DARPA Internet Gateway, Robert Hinden, Alan Sheltzer (September 1982), section 4.4
  3. ^ RFC 942, Transport Protocols For Department of Defense Data Networks, National Research Council, (February 1985), p.17