hierarchical routing

from The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (8 July 2008)
hierarchical routing

   The complex problem of routing on large networks can be
   simplified by breaking a network into a hierarchy of smaller
   networks, where each level is responsible for its own routing.
   The Internet has, basically, three levels: the backbones, the
   mid-levels, and the stub networks.  The backbones know how to
   route between the mid-levels, the mid-levels know how to route
   between the sites, and each site (being an autonomous system)
   knows how to route internally.  See also Exterior Gateway
   Protocol, Interior Gateway Protocol, transit network.
    

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