Router
See also: Hub, Switch, Routing
Also known as a Gateway
A Router is an intelligent device that links two or more computer networks together.
Generally (see note below) this means that it links two subdivisions or Subnets of a TCP/IP network together.
A router can be a dedicated device or it can be a normal PC with two or more network cards. It operates a bit like a postal exchange. Network data is sent as packets. Each packet contains information as to its destination. A router will read the destination of every packet it receives and work out where to send it. It does this by consulting its Routing Table. The Routing Table is a list of destination network addresses and/or subnets. In this list each destination is cross-referenced to one of the router's network interfaces and the address of the next router on the path to that destination. The router does not "know" the entire delivery path or 'Route of the data. It simply "knows" that by sending the data to the appropriate interface it will get to its destination.
Routers often have a Default Route (sometimes called a Default Gateway in their Routing Tables. If the router receives a packet that is destined for an address that is not in its Routing Table, the router will send that packet to the Default Gateway, if it has one. If the router does not have Default route and it does not "know" where to send the packet, it will send a Destination Host Unreachable or similar message back to the sender.
Note: A device that links two parts of a network together that are physically different medium eg FibreOptic and Cat5 Ethernet or Cat5 and 802.11b Ethernet is generally not considered to be a Router unless it also routes traffic between two networks or Subnets.
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