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  2. Ingress router - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ingress_router

    An ingress router is a label switch router that is a starting point (source) for a given label-switched path (LSP). An ingress router may be an egress router or an intermediate router for any other LSP(s). Hence the role of ingress and egress routers is LSP specific.

  3. Multiprotocol Label Switching - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiprotocol_Label_Switching

    The router which first prefixes the MPLS header to a packet is an ingress router. The last router in an LSP, which pops the label from the packet, is called an egress router. Routers in between, which need only swap labels, are called transit routers or label switch routers (LSRs).

  4. Egress router - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egress_router

    An egress router may be an ingress router or an intermediate router for any other LSP(s). Hence the role of egress and ingress routers is LSP specific. Usually, the MPLS label is attached with an IP packet at the ingress router and removed at the egress router, whereas label swapping is performed on the intermediate routers.

  5. Forwarding information base - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forwarding_information_base

    Ingress filtering for multihomed routers will accept the packet if there is a route back to its source address from any interface on the router. For this type of filtering, the router may also maintain an adjacency table, also organized for fast lookup, that keeps track of the router interface addresses that are on all directly connected ...

  6. Label Distribution Protocol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Label_Distribution_Protocol

    Label Distribution Protocol (LDP) is a protocol in which routers capable of Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) exchange label mapping information. Two routers with an established session are called LDP peers and the exchange of information is bi-directional.

  7. Path protection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Path_protection

    In the former case, the head-end router is the input or ingress router. In the latter case the tail-end represents the output or egress router in the path. There are a few protection techniques for MPLS [ 8 ] very similar in the general concept to those for Optical Mesh Networks , such as link protection (e.g., MPLS local protection ) and path ...

  8. Ingress - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ingress

    Ingress (signal leakage), the passage of an outside signal into a coaxial cable; Ingress filtering, a computer network packet filtering technique; Ingress protection rating, a protection level that electrical appliances provide against intrusion of physical objects; Ingress router, a source label switch router

  9. Ingress filtering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ingress_filtering

    In ingress filtering, packets coming into the network are filtered if the network sending it should not send packets from the originating IP address(es). If the end host is a stub network or host, the router needs to filter all IP packets that have, as the source IP, private addresses (RFC 1918), bogon addresses or addresses that do not have ...