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Can you point me to the Internet, please

Most client computers just have one network connection; usually, only servers are multihomed

(which means having more than one network interface). In most cases, a computer also only has

one gateway, which is the IP address of the computer or router that routes traffic to the next

network segment and ultimately to the Internet. If a company has more than one connection to the

Internet, it's common to assign more than one gateway to a client computer so it can still connect to

the Internet (or other network segments) if one of the gateways goes belly-up.



A Windows 2000 computer builds a routing table when it boots and uses that routing table to

determine how to route outgoing traffic. When you have more than one gateway, the computer

might not use the most current routes. Therefore, try to route traffic through a gateway that is

down or through a route that is less efficient than another. You can use the RIP Listener service to

enable the computer to adjust to routing changes.



The RIP Listener service lets the computer listen for RIP announcements from routers and modify

its routing table accordingly. So, if a route changes because one or more routers or segments is

down or the cost changes for a route, the Windows 2000 client can adjust accordingly.



In order to use the RIP Listener service, your adjacent routers must support the RIP v1 protocol.

The RIP Listener service can also listen for RIP v2 announcements that are sent as subnet-level

broadcasts, but it doesn't receive RIP v2 multicast announcements. You'll find the RIP Listener

service in the Networking Services item under Add/Remove Windows Components, which you

access from Add/Remove Programs in the Control Panel.

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