Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System Protocol

Why Trust Techopedia

What Does Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System Protocol Mean?

Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System Protocol (IS-IS protocol) is an Interior Gateway Protocol that uses packet-switched networks to support efficient autonomous system routing for Internet service providers and large enterprises.

Advertisements

IS-IS was originally defined by the International Organization for Standardization and International Electrotechnical Commission as ISO/IEC 10589:2002. The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) also published IS-IS as RFC 1142.

IS-IS is also known as integrated IS-IS.

Techopedia Explains Intermediate System-to-Intermediate System Protocol

IS-IS is based on the OSI model and assigns IS-IS nework router addresses to facilitate routing, bandwidth scalability and convergence. Routers build link state packets (LSP) based on local IS-IS interfaces and adjacent router prefixes. The routers flood LSPs to adjacent routers, and packets are encapsulated in the data link layer. IS-IS then adapts to Internet Protocol data transfer.

Key IS-IS features include:

Hierarchical routing
Fast convergence
Flexible timer tuning
Rapid LSP data flooding

Scalability

IS-IS routing components include a routing database that holds link state and forwarding databases, as well as the following four processes:

Receive: Includes data entry point (user/routing data, error reports, control packets), forwarding process user data, and error reports and update process routing data and control packets.

Update: Generates local LSPs flooded to adjacent routers and receives processes; forwards LSPs from adjacent routers.

Decision: Runs the open-shortest-path-first algorithm based on the LSP database and creates the forwarding database. Next hop information and equal cost path sets create load balancing adjacency sets.

Forward: Compiles received LSPs. Forwarding database transmits LSPs to destination points. Redirects load sharing and generates error reports.

Advertisements

Related Terms

Margaret Rouse
Technology Expert
Margaret Rouse
Technology Expert

Margaret é uma premiada redatora e professora conhecida por sua habilidade de explicar assuntos técnicos complexos para um público empresarial não técnico. Nos últimos vinte anos, suas definições de TI foram publicadas pela Que em uma enciclopédia de termos tecnológicos e citadas em artigos do New York Times, Time Magazine, USA Today, ZDNet, PC Magazine e Discovery Magazine. Ela ingressou na Techopedia em 2011. A ideia de Margaret de um dia divertido é ajudar os profissionais de TI e de negócios a aprenderem a falar os idiomas altamente especializados uns dos outros.