LAN Switching
SKILLSET
No description available
Related Questions
- Refer to the exhibit. If Switch SW1 is the root Bridge and Switch SW4's interface f1/2 is the blocked port. What is the accumulated cost of the path of Switch SW4 to reach to the Root Bridge SW1?
- Which of the following Layer 2 protocols provide faster convergence time after a link failure?
- When STP 802.1D has finished its convergence; which of the following are two possible port states? (Choose two)
- With rapid-PVST+, which one correctly describes the function of an Alternate Port?
- The purpose of the CAM table is to:
- What is the default STP Root Bridge priority value?
- What is referred to the process when all ports on bridges and switches in a Spanning Tree network, have transitioned to either the forwarding or blocking modes?
- Refer to the exhibit. What is true about the Spanning Tree Instances of Switch SW3?
- *****NO EXHIBIT***** - Select Switch SW4 F1/2, Blocking., Switch SW1 G1/0, Designated., Switch SW2 G1/0, Root Port. Refer to the exhibit. The switches have been configured to run Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol (802.1w) and no default configuration has been changed. Which of the following statements are true about the interface and its port role for each switch? (Choose three)
- Rapid Spanning-tree Protocol ( `RSTP` / IEEE 802.1w ) is able to interoperate with the legacy switches on a per-port basis by reverting back to the older standard: ` 802.1D` ( STP or Common Spanning-Tree Protocol/CST.). The original: `STP` is defined with five different port states, while the newer: ` RSTP` has three port states: Discarding, Learning and Forwarding states.