A network administrator views the output from the show ip route command. A network that is advertised by both RIP and IGRP appears in the routing table flagged as an IGRP route. Why is the RIP route to this network not used in the routing table?

A network administrator views the output from the show ip route command. A network that is advertised by both RIP and IGRP appears in the routing table flagged as an IGRP route. Why is the RIP route to this network not used in the routing table? Correct Answer IGRP has a lower administrative distance.

RIP has an administrative distance (AD) of 120, while IGRP has an administrative distance of 100, so the router will discard any route with a higher AD than 100.

Related Questions

If your routing table has a static, a RIP, and an IGRP route to the same network, which route will be used to route packets by default?
What command is used to stop RIP routing updates from exiting out an interface but still allow the interface to receive RIP route updates?