Hi!
On Mon, Apr 16, 2012 at 1:03 PM, Antonio Quartulli ordex@autistici.org wrote:
We are not talking about another "wireless oriented" routing protocol, which would need to measure link quality (cost) and announce it. We are talking about something like OSPF/BGP/RIP which can be configured to announce routes only (actually I think this is the standard way they work and this is also the reason why they are not suitable for wireless networks).
I admit I am not familiar how those protocols work, but I imagine they need to check if node is available/reachable in some regular intervals? Or it is that node is just announcing its routes in regular intervals and once it stops, after some timeout other daemons remove the route?
Yes, I am aware that wireless cost is unneeded. But reachability checking should still be done?
BTW, if multiple nodes are announcing the same subnet/prefix, how does the L3 routing protocol daemon knows which one to select? From its point of view everything is one hope away, but in reality there could be huge differences?
For DHCP you sniff packets. But could be there some general way?
Mitar