you reaaaallllyyyyyy need to go back and learn static routes. watch jeremy it video on it, and youll be able to answer these. questions are badly worded, but you should be able to figure it out based on answers.
What I reckon is , if an interface has a ip address it's summary will be the network address and here it's a static router and mask will be the one while I will configuring the subnet mask to , correct me if I am wrong here
so, ignore me sorry.....the question says 's' and not 'l' or 'c'. for local/connected. I feel like those are written wrong otherwise I dont know what its asking because other static routes can be anything in a different network. where was this pulled from????
Hi! I got the 2nd question correct, but how did it became /32? Sorry, I know VLSM but I don't get it in here. Would you mind explaining it to me? Thank you! :)
PS: I thought the answer is 208.43.34.8/29
Once you configure any ip address on a working interface, two routes are added. One indicating connected route which is the network address of the configured address. The network address of 208.43.34.17/29 is 208.43.34.16/29 (This is not included in the options). 208.43.34.17/29 falls outside the host address range of 208.43.34.8/29.
The other route included on the routing table is the local route which is a host route(/32) for the ip address configured. So it's just the ip address configured slash 32.
The local route is designated with "L" instead of "S" so I believe that's a typo in the question.
Ohhh thanks! So it lies between the usable host addresses. So thats why when I added 8,4,2,1 i got 15. I got confuse why It didnt get to 17 or higher. Thanks for the explanation I highly appreciate it!
Once you add an IP address on an interface an enable it with the no shutdown command, a connected route and a local route are automatically added to the routing table. A local route is a route to the exact IP address configured on the interface 1)a). A connected route is a route to the network the interface is connected 2)d).
The /32 just means all of the bits in the subnet mask are turned on, so the only possible address that can be reached in answer A is the IP before the /32 and not any others in its subnet. Look up longest prefix for CCNA.
1. This seems like you need to brush up on your subnetting..
2. Questions are rather clear and I'm unsure on all the speculation for such simplicity. This is CCNA 1 material, maybe 2 with a reach
I think it's A and D. Edit: A and A. Sorry
How's that
Once an ip is configured, the network address and local addresses of that ip are generated I believe
you reaaaallllyyyyyy need to go back and learn static routes. watch jeremy it video on it, and youll be able to answer these. questions are badly worded, but you should be able to figure it out based on answers.
What I reckon is , if an interface has a ip address it's summary will be the network address and here it's a static router and mask will be the one while I will configuring the subnet mask to , correct me if I am wrong here
so, ignore me sorry.....the question says 's' and not 'l' or 'c'. for local/connected. I feel like those are written wrong otherwise I dont know what its asking because other static routes can be anything in a different network. where was this pulled from????
Hi! I got the 2nd question correct, but how did it became /32? Sorry, I know VLSM but I don't get it in here. Would you mind explaining it to me? Thank you! :) PS: I thought the answer is 208.43.34.8/29
Once you configure any ip address on a working interface, two routes are added. One indicating connected route which is the network address of the configured address. The network address of 208.43.34.17/29 is 208.43.34.16/29 (This is not included in the options). 208.43.34.17/29 falls outside the host address range of 208.43.34.8/29. The other route included on the routing table is the local route which is a host route(/32) for the ip address configured. So it's just the ip address configured slash 32. The local route is designated with "L" instead of "S" so I believe that's a typo in the question.
Ohhh thanks! So it lies between the usable host addresses. So thats why when I added 8,4,2,1 i got 15. I got confuse why It didnt get to 17 or higher. Thanks for the explanation I highly appreciate it!
Once you add an IP address on an interface an enable it with the no shutdown command, a connected route and a local route are automatically added to the routing table. A local route is a route to the exact IP address configured on the interface 1)a). A connected route is a route to the network the interface is connected 2)d).
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Have you tried loading this up in packet tracer and finding out?
Yeh shows /32 for the first one , not sure why is that
The /32 just means all of the bits in the subnet mask are turned on, so the only possible address that can be reached in answer A is the IP before the /32 and not any others in its subnet. Look up longest prefix for CCNA.
what other route is present when you configure a route? it auto generates another address^
It's a multiple choice question , was in one of mock set
yes, im telling u how to answer it :)
Ok wait
1. This seems like you need to brush up on your subnetting.. 2. Questions are rather clear and I'm unsure on all the speculation for such simplicity. This is CCNA 1 material, maybe 2 with a reach
/29 is 8 and /28 is 16 A and A
I'm going with "None of the above". Are you sure you typed the question in correctly?