A virtual routing system includes a number of physical routers. One of the
physical routers is the master with respect to a given source of traffic,
and the others are backups. If the master router fails, then one of the
backup routers becomes the master to provide substantially uninterrupted
service through the virtual routing system. A virtual redundant routing
protocol (VRRP) can be extended to support sub-second advertising of VRRP
packets by a master router a backup router. In some cases, sub-second
switching is supported, in which a backup router can become a new master
router after less than a second of down time by the original master
router. Such responsiveness in a virtual routing system is very useful
for many applications, such as voice-over-packet applications in which
down time of the routing system for more than one second is unacceptable.