routed - meaning and definition. What is routed
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What (who) is routed - definition

PROCESS OF SELECTING PATHS IN A DATA COMMUNICATIONS NETWORK
ROUTING; Routing information; Routing algorithm; External gateway protocol; Network routing; Network routing method; Routed protocols; Routed Protocols; Routable; Routed; Routing algorithms; Centralized routing

routed         
<networking> /root dee/ Route Daemon. A program which runs under 4.2BSD Unix systems and derivatives to propagate routes among machines on a local area network, using the Routing Information Protocol. See also gated. (2002-07-31)
Routed         
·Impf & ·p.p. of Rout.
routing         
<tool> /row'ting/ Using a kind of rotating cutting tool called a router, pronounced /row't*/. In the USA a router, pronounced /row't*/, is also a network device that performs "routing". In the UK, the network device is pronounced /roo't*/ and what it does is spelled "routeing". (2002-07-31)

Wikipedia

Routing

Routing is the process of selecting a path for traffic in a network or between or across multiple networks. Broadly, routing is performed in many types of networks, including circuit-switched networks, such as the public switched telephone network (PSTN), and computer networks, such as the Internet.

In packet switching networks, routing is the higher-level decision making that directs network packets from their source toward their destination through intermediate network nodes by specific packet forwarding mechanisms. Packet forwarding is the transit of network packets from one network interface to another. Intermediate nodes are typically network hardware devices such as routers, gateways, firewalls, or switches. General-purpose computers also forward packets and perform routing, although they have no specially optimized hardware for the task.

The routing process usually directs forwarding on the basis of routing tables. Routing tables maintain a record of the routes to various network destinations. Routing tables may be specified by an administrator, learned by observing network traffic or built with the assistance of routing protocols.

Routing, in a narrower sense of the term, often refers to IP routing and is contrasted with bridging. IP routing assumes that network addresses are structured and that similar addresses imply proximity within the network. Structured addresses allow a single routing table entry to represent the route to a group of devices. In large networks, structured addressing (routing, in the narrow sense) outperforms unstructured addressing (bridging). Routing has become the dominant form of addressing on the Internet. Bridging is still widely used within local area networks.

Examples of use of routed
1. The military never routed PKK rebels from northern Iraq.
2. Eventually all traffic had to be routed along two tracks.
3. MacArthur‘s troops violently routed the Bonus Army, on Hoover‘s orders.
4. Schundler, the conservative who was routed by Mr.
5. During those polls the ANP was routed in the NWFP.