Welcome back! Here are the answers to Sunday's Cisco certification exam practice questions!
CCNA:
A frame comes into a switch on port fast0/1. The switch does a lookup on the destination MAC, and sees that the destination is also found off fast0/1. What action describes how the frame will be handled?
A. broadcast
B. unicast
C. forwarded
D. filtered
E. multicast
Answer: D. That frame is filtered - that is, the switch drops it.
CCNP / BSCI: Cisco OSPF design guidelines state that a router should be in no more than how many areas?
A. One
B. Two
C. Three
D. Four
E. Five
Answer: C. Cisco recommends a router not be placed in more than three areas.
CCNP / BCMSN:
Which of the following is NOT true of a SPAN source port?
A. It can be part of an Etherchannel.
B. It can be monitored in multiple SPAN sessions.
C. It can be a regular Ethernet port, Fast Ethernet, or Gigabit Ethernet.
D. It can also be a destination SPAN port.
Answer: D. A SPAN source port cannot be a destination port. The other three statements are true of source ports.
See you later with new questions, a new CCNP tutorial, and more!
To your success,
Chris Bryant
CCIE #12933
http://www.thebryantadvantage.com
CCNA:
A frame comes into a switch on port fast0/1. The switch does a lookup on the destination MAC, and sees that the destination is also found off fast0/1. What action describes how the frame will be handled?
A. broadcast
B. unicast
C. forwarded
D. filtered
E. multicast
Answer: D. That frame is filtered - that is, the switch drops it.
CCNP / BSCI: Cisco OSPF design guidelines state that a router should be in no more than how many areas?
A. One
B. Two
C. Three
D. Four
E. Five
Answer: C. Cisco recommends a router not be placed in more than three areas.
CCNP / BCMSN:
Which of the following is NOT true of a SPAN source port?
A. It can be part of an Etherchannel.
B. It can be monitored in multiple SPAN sessions.
C. It can be a regular Ethernet port, Fast Ethernet, or Gigabit Ethernet.
D. It can also be a destination SPAN port.
Answer: D. A SPAN source port cannot be a destination port. The other three statements are true of source ports.
See you later with new questions, a new CCNP tutorial, and more!
To your success,
Chris Bryant
CCIE #12933
http://www.thebryantadvantage.com
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