Ditka - ICND1 - Chapter 13 Flashcards

1
Q

Host A is a PC, connected to switch SW1 and assigned to VLAN 1. Which of the following are typically assigned to an IP address in the same subnet as host A? (Choose two answers.)

a) The local router’s WAN interface.
b) The local router’s LAN interface.
c) All other hosts attached to the same switch.
d) Other hosts attached to the same switch and also in VLAN 1.

A

B and D. The general rule to determine whether two devices’ interfaces should be in the same subnet is whether the two interfaces are separated from each other by a router. To provide a way for hosts in one VLAN to send data to hosts outside that VLAN, a local router must connect its LAN interface to the same VLAN as the hosts, and have an address in the same subnet as the hosts. All the hosts in that same VLAN on the same switch would not be separated from each other by a router, so these hosts would also be in the same subnet. However, another PC, connected to the same switch but in a different VLAN, will require its packets to flow through a router to reach Host A, so Host A’s IP address would need to be in a different subnet compared to this new host.

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2
Q

Why does the formula for the number of hosts per subnet (2^H - 2) require the subtraction of two hosts?

a) To reserve two addresses for redundant default gateways (routers)
b) To reserve the addresses required for DHCP operation
c) To reserve addresses for the subnet ID and default gateway (router)
d) To reserve addresses for the subnet broadcast address and subnet ID

A

D. By definition, two address values in every IPv4 subnet cannot be used as host IPv4 addresses: the first (lowest) numeric value in the subnet for the subnet ID, and the last (highest) numeric value in the subnet for the subnet broadcast address.

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3
Q

A Class B network needs to be subnetted such that it supports 100 subnets and 100 hosts/subnet. Which of the following answers lists a workable combination for the network, subnet, and host bits? (Choose two answers.)

a) Network = 16, subnet = 7, host = 7
b) Network = 16, subnet = 8, host = 8
c) Network = 16, subnet = 8, host = 8
d) Network = 8, subnet = 7, host = 17

A

B and C. At least 7 subnet bits are needed, because 26 = 64, so 6 subnet bits could not number 100 different subnets. Seven subnet bits could, because 27 = 128 => 100. Similarly, 6 host bits is not enough, because 26 − 2 = 62, but 7 host bits is enough, because 27 − 2 = 126 => 100. The number of network, subnet, and host bits must total 32 bits, making one of the answers incorrect. The answer with 8 network bits cannot be correct because the question states that a Class B network is used, so the number of network bits must always be 16. The two correct answers have 16 network bits (required because the question states the use of a Class B network), and at least 7 subnet and host bits each.

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4
Q

Which of the following are private IP networks? (Choose two answers.)

a) 172.31.0.0
b) 172.32.0.0
c) 192.168.255.0
d) 192.1.168.0
e) 11.0.0.0

A

A and C. The private IPv4 networks, defined by RFC 1918, are Class A network 10.0.0.0, the 16 Class B networks from 172.16.0.0 to 172.31.0.0, and the 256 Class C networks that begin with 192.168.

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5
Q

Which of the following are public IP networks? (Choose two answers.)

a) 9.0.0.0
b) 172.30.0.0
c) 192.168.255.0
d) 192.1.168.0
e) 1.0.0.0

A

A, D, and E. The private IPv4 networks, defined by RFC 1918, are Class A network 10.0.0.0, the 16 Class B networks from 172.16.0.0 to 172.31.0.0, and the 256 Class C networks that begin with 192.168. The three correct answers are from the public IP network range, and none are reserved values.

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6
Q

Before Class B network 172.16.0.0 is subnetted by a network engineer, what parts of the structure of the IP addresses in this network already exist, with a specific size? (Choose two answers.)

a) Network
b) Subnet
c) Host
d) Broadcast

A

A and C. An unsubnetted Class A, B, or C network has two parts: the network and host parts.

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7
Q

A network engineer spends time thinking about the entire Class B network 172.16.0.0, and how to subnet that network. He then chooses how to subnet this Class B network and creates addressing and subnetting plan, on paper, showing his choices. If you compare his thoughts about this network before subnetting the network, which of the following occurred to the parts of the structure of addresses in this network?

a) The subnet part got smaller.
b) The host part got smaller.
c) the network part got smaller.
d) The host part was removed.
e) The network part was removed.

A

B. An unsubnetted Class A, B, or C network has two parts: the network and host parts. To perform subnetting, the engineer creates a new subnet part by borrowing host bits, shrinking the number of host bits. The subnet part of the address structure exists only after the engineer chooses a nondefault mask. The network part remains a constant size.

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