Well, obviously it would be the speed of light times two.
However, this can be misleading. Equations are all fine and dandy, but if you do not understand them, they are not of complete help. Imagine that you have the following...
1) A 300,000 km long spaceship which is at rest in space.
2) A clock is located at each opposite end of the spaceship, and these clocks are synchronized.
Therefore, if a burst of light is released from either end at precisely 12:00 noon, and the light is heading towards the opposite end, it will reach the opposite end when both clocks say 12:00 noon plus 1 second. Thus the light crossed 300,000 km's in a time period of 1 second, as expected.
However, if we launch the spaceship and set the spaceships forward velocity to 260,000 kps, then based upon the Time Dilation equation, the clocks onboard will be ticking at half speed. Also, based upon the Lorentz-Fitzgerald Contraction equation, the spaceship will have contracted to a new spatial length of 150,000 kms. And, if taking the Lorentz Transformation equations into account as well, we see that the clock at the rear of the spaceship is 0.866 of a second ahead of the clock at the front.
If we send a burst of light from the rear of the spaceship to the front, to an external observer, who is at rest in space, it appears to take 3.73 seconds for the light to complete the trip. To the observer, who is at rest in space, the light is only traveling 40,000 kps faster than the spaceship, thus 150,000 km length / 40,000 kps = 3.73 seconds.
Onboard however, clocks are ticking at half speed, thus they would measure 3.73 * 0.5 = 1.866 sec. However, the clock at the front is lagging behind the clock at the rear by 0.866 sec. Therefore, 0.866 is subtracted from that 1.866 sec measurement, thus the outcome is 1.866 - 0.866 = 1.000, meaning, when the light reaches the front clock, it will register 12:00 noon plus 1 second. Thus, to those on board, everything seems to be the same.
If we send a burst of light from the front of the spaceship to the rear, to an external observer, who is at rest in space, it appears to take only 0.268 of a second for the light to complete the trip. To the observer, who is at rest in space, the light travels across the 150,000 km spaceship at 560,000 kps ( 260,000 kps + 300,000 kps ), thus 150,000 km length / 560,000 kps = 0.268 of a second.
Onboard, however, clocks are ticking at half speed, thus they would measure 0.268 * 0.5 = 0.134. However, the clock at the rear is ahead of the clock at the front by 0.866 sec. Therefore, 0.866 is added to that 0.134 sec measurement, thus the outcome is 0.134 + 0.866 = 1.000, meaning, when the light reaches the rear clock, it will register 12:00 noon plus 1 second. Thus, to those on board, once again, everything seems to be the same.
Now if we send light from the front to the rear again, but the spaceship was moving almost at the speed of light itself, the length will have contracted to almost zero, the clocks will almost be at a stand still, and the clocks will be offset from each other by almost 1 second.
Thus the outcome, for example, may be....
0.0000001 sec.[time period ] + 0.9999999 sec. [clock offsets] = 1 second.
Thus one needs to understand that the measurement one takes is done with numerous measurement instruments, Thus as in the last example, even though the speed of the spaceship relative to the light is close to 600,000 kps, if someone in that spaceship measures the speed of that light, the outcome is still 300,000 kps.
Here, in this example, most of the measurement is determined by the 0.9999999 sec. clock offset rather than the ticking of time.
But when dealing with photons, and their point of view, we do not have these measurement instruments at hand.