HP (Hewlett-Packard) 6208M-SX Switch User Manual


 
Advanced Configuration and Management Guide
Comparison of VRRP, VRRPE, and SRP
This section compares HPs router redundancy protocols.
VRRP
VRRP is a standards-based protocol, described in RFC 2338. The HP implementation of VRRP contains the
features in RFC 2338. The HP implementation also provides the following additional features:
Track ports An HP feature that enables you to diagnose the health of all the routing switchs ports used by
the backed-up VRID, instead of only the port connected to the client sub-net. See Track Ports and Track
Priority on page 12-5.
Suppression of RIP advertisements on Backup routes for the backed up interface You can enable the
routing switches to advertise only the path to the Master router for the backed up interface. Normally, a VRRP
Backup router includes route information for the interface it is backing up in RIP advertisements.
HP routing switches configured for VRRP can interoperate with third-party routers using VRRP.
VRRPE
VRRPE is an HP protocol that provides the benefits of VRRP without the limitations. In fact, VRRPE combines the
benefits of HPs VRRP and SRP (see SRP). VRRPE is unlike VRRP and is like SRP in the following ways:
There is no Owner router. You do not need to use an IP address configured on one of the routing switches
as the virtual router ID (VRID), which is the address you are backing up for redundancy. The VRID is
independent of the IP interfaces configured in the routing switches. As a result, the protocol does not have an
Owner as VRRP does.
There is no restriction on which router can be the default master router. In VRRP, the Owner (the routing
switch on which the IP interface that is used for the VRID is configured) must be the default Master.
HP routing switches configured for VRRPE can interoperate only with other HP routing switches.
SRP
The Standby Router Protocol (SRP) is another HP router redundancy protocol that provides many of the same
features as HPs implementation of VRRP and VRRPE. However, SRP does not provide authentication, which
VRRP and VRRPE do. In addition, SRP allows only one backup router.
SRP is available only on HP routing switches.
Architectural Differences
The protocols have the following architectural differences.
Management Protocol
VRRP VRRP routers send VRRP Hello and Hello messages to IP Multicast address 224.0.0.18.
VRRPE VRRPE sends messages to destination MAC address 01-00-5E-00-00-02 and destination IP
address 224.0.0.2 (the standard IP multicast address for all routers).
SRP SRP sends management traffic to a user-configured unicast address.
Virtual Router IP Address (the address you are backing up)
VRRP The virtual router IP address is the same as an IP address or virtual interface configured on one of
the routing switches, which is the Owner and becomes the default Master.
VRRPE The virtual router IP address is the gateway address you want to backup, but does not need to be
an IP interface configured on one of the routing switchs ports or a virtual interface.
SRP The virtual router IP address is a user-configured virtual IP address.
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