Free content for your website or blog
Home About Us Article Writing Most Read Articles Authors Blog Wiki Contact Us
RSS Register Login
Topics
 
Home > Computer Hardware >

Cisco CCNA, CCNP, And Security Practice Exam: OSPF Neighbors, Fail Closed, SDM, And More!

Date Published: 14th August 2008
Bookmark and Share Republish Cisco CCNA, CCNP, And Security Practice Exam:  OSPF Neighbors, Fail Closed, SDM, And More!
Author: Chris Bryant RSS Views: N/A PRINT ASK ABOUT THIS ARTICLE
Here’s a free Cisco certification practice exam for you! Answers are at the bottom of the article. No peeking!


CCNA Certification:

In an OSPF hub-and-spoke NBMA network, which router(s) require the neighbor command?

A. The DR

B. The DROthers

C. The BDR

D. All of these

E. None of these



CCNA Security Certification / CCNP ISCW Exam:

You're configuring IPS in SDM, and you just enabled the Fail Closed option. What's the net effect?



CCNP Certification / BSCI Exam:

Which of the following are Cisco recommendations for OSPF deployments?

A. No router in more than three areas.

B. No area should contain more than 50 routers.

C. No router should have more than 60 neighbors.

D. No ABR should run more than one OSPF process.




CCNP Certification / BCMSN Exam:

You're examining the lights on a Cisco Aironet card. The green light is blinking slowly, the amber light is off. What does this generally indicate?



CCNP / ONT Exam:

What is Global Synchronization? Is it a benefit or a detriment to network performance?


Here are the answers!

CCNA: Answer: A. The DR requires the neighbor command. It will not hurt anything to have it configured on the DROthers in real-world networks, but I wouldn't put it there on exam day. There are no BDRs in an OSPF hub-and-spoke network.

ISCW / CCNA Security: Answer: Here's the exact description of Fail Closed from SDM itself:

"By default, while IOS compiles a new signature for a particular engine, it allows packets to pass through without scanning for the corresponding engine. Enable this option to make IOS drop packets during the compilation process."


Fail Closed is disabled by default.

BSCI: Answer: A, B, C, D. Those are all Cisco best practices for OSPF.


BCMSN: Answer: Here's a quick review of what those lights are and what the different combinations indicate.

We have two lights on a Cisco Aironet card. The green light is the Status LED, and the amber light is the Activity LED. We've got quite a few combinations with those two lights, so let's take a look at what each of the following LED readouts indicates.

Status off, Activity off - Naturally, this means the card isn't getting power!

Status blinking slowly, Activity off - the adapter's in Power Save mode.

Status on, Activity off - adapter has come out of Power Save mode.

Both lights blinking in an alternating fashion - adapter is scanning for its network.

Both lights blinking slowly at the same time - adapter has successfully associated with an AP (or other client if you have an Ad Hoc network)

Both lights blinking quickly at the same time - adapter is associated and is sending or receiving data


ONT: Answer: Here's a review of tail drop and how it can cause Global Synchronization. Usually synchronization is good, but this kind isn't!

When the queue is full, packets that are trying to queue up for transmission literally have nowhere to be put! These packets are then subject to tail drop, which is a fancy way of saying "you're being dropped because we have no place to put you".

You know that TCP has a detection and recovery scheme when it comes to missing segments, so tail drop is no big deal, right? Quite the opposite, it's a huge deal.

The problem starts innocently enough, as the senders realize their TCP packets are being dropped. As we'd expect, the senders then throttle back on their transmission speed. After doing so, the senders will then gradually speed their transmission rates back up.

As multiple senders increase their transmission rates, the queue will fill up again, and the senders will again almost simultaneously slow their tranmission rates, followed by another near-simultaneous increase.

As a result of this global synchronization, the links are perpetually in one of two states - congested or underused. Basically, the network ends up being either hammered or not being used to its full potential, and those are both circumstances we want to avoid.

One way to avoid global synchronization is though the use of Random Early Detection (RED).

Look for more Cisco practice exams on my website as well as this one!
This article is free for republishing
Source: http://www.articlealley.com/article_598158_10.html
About the Author
Chris Bryant, CCIE #12933, is the owner of The Bryant Advantage, home of over 100 free certification exam tutorials, including Cisco CCNA certification test prep articles. His exclusive Cisco CCNA study guide and Cisco CCNA training is also available! Visit his blog and sign up for Cisco Certification Central, a daily newsletter packed with CCNA, Network+, Security+, A+, and CCNP certification exam practice questions! A free 7-part course, “How To Pass The CCNA”, is also available, and you can attend an in-person or online CCNA boot camp with The Bryant Advantage!
Bookmark and Share Republish Cisco CCNA, CCNP, And Security Practice Exam:  OSPF Neighbors, Fail Closed, SDM, And More!

Ask a Question About this Article

>> Father on Social Security, 2 kid's Father 51%, Mother 49% Can the mother still claim kids on Taxes.
>> How do I change my daughter's aol sign in ...
>> What is the greatest antivirus nows on?
>> Do I need to take computer out of bag for ...
Powered by