Which mask should you use on point-to-point WAN links in order to reduce
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What is the maximum
number of IP addresses that can be assigned to hosts on a local subnet that
uses the 255.255.255.224 subnet mask?
A. 14
B. 15
C. 16
D. 30
E. 31
F. 62
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D. A /27
(255.255.255.224) is 3 bits on and 5 bits off. This provides 8 subnets, each
with 30 hosts. Does it matter if this mask is used with a Class A, B, or C
network address? Not at all. The number of host bits would never change
You have a network
that needs 29 subnets while maximizing the number of host addresses available
on each subnet. How many bits must you borrow from the host field to provide
the correct subnet mask?
A. 2
B. 3
C. 4
D. 5
E. 6
F. 7
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D. A 240 mask is 4
subnet bits and provides 16 subnets, each with 14 hosts. We need more subnets,
so lets add subnet bits. One more subnet bit would be a 248 mask. This provides
5 subnet bits (32 subnets) with 3 host bits (6 hosts per subnet). This is the
best answer.
What is the subnetwork
address for a host with the IP address 200.10.5.68/28?
A. 200.10.5.56
B. 200.10.5.32
C. 200.10.5.64
D. 200.10.5.0
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C. This is a pretty
simple question. A /28 is 255.255.255.240, which means that our block size is
16 in the fourth octet. 0, 16, 32, 48, 64, 80, etc. The host is in the 64
subnet.
he network address of
172.16.0.0/19 provides how many subnets and hosts?
A. 7 subnets, 30 hosts each
B. 7 subnets, 2,046 hosts each
C. 7 subnets, 8,190 hosts each
D. 8 subnets, 30 hosts each
E. 8 subnets, 2,046 hosts each
F. 8 subnets, 8,190 hosts each
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F. A CIDR address of
/19 is 255.255.224.0. This is a Class B address, so that is only 3 subnet bits,
but it provides 13 host bits, or 8 subnets, each with 8,190 hosts.
Which two statements
describe the IP address 10.16.3.65/23? (Choose two.)
A. The subnet address is 10.16.3.0 255.255.254.0.
B. The lowest host address in the subnet is 10.16.2.1 255.255.254.0.
C. The last valid host address in the subnet is 10.16.2.254 255.255.254.0.
D. The broadcast address of the subnet is 10.16.3.255 255.255.254.0.
E. The network is not subnetted.
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B,D The mask
255.255.254.0 (/23) used with a Class A address means that there are 15 subnet
bits and 9 host bits. The block size in the third octet is 2 (256 254). So this
makes the subnets in the interesting octet 0, 2, 4, 6, etc., all the way to
254. The host 10.16.3.65 is in the 2.0 subnet. The next subnet is 4.0, so the
broadcast address for the 2.0 subnet is 3.255. The valid host addresses are 2.1
through 3.254.
If a host on a network
has the address 172.16.45.14/30, what is the subnetwork this host belongs to?
A. 172.16.45.0
B. 172.16.45.4
C. 172.16.45.8
D. 172.16.45.12
E. 172.16.45.16
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D. A /30, regardless
of the class of address, has a 252 in the fourth octet. This means we have a
block size of 4 and our subnets are 0, 4, 8, 12, 16, etc. Address 14 is
obviously in the 12 subnet.
Which mask should you
use on point-to-point WAN links in order to reduce the waste of IP addresses?
A. /27
B. /28
C. /29
D. /30
E. /31
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D. A point-to-point
link uses only two hosts. A /30, or 255.255.255.252, mask provides two hosts
per subnet.
What is the subnetwork
number of a host with an IP address of 172.16.66.0/21?
A. 172.16.36.0
B. 172.16.48.0
C. 172.16.64.0
D. 172.16.0.0
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C. A /21 is
255.255.248.0, which means we have a block size of 8 in the third octet, so we
just count by 8 until we reach 66. The subnet in this question is 64.0. The
next subnet is 72.0, so the broadcast address of the 64 subnet is 71.255.
You have an interface
on a router with the IP address of 192.168.192.10/29. Including the router
interface, how many hosts can have IP addresses on the LAN attached to the
router interface?
A. 6
B. 8
C. 30
D. 62
E. 126
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A /29
(255.255.255.248), regardless of the class of address, has only 3 host bits.
Six hosts are the maximum number of hosts on this LAN, including the router
interface.
You need to configure
a server that is on the subnet 192.168.19.24/29. The router has the first
available host address. Which of the following should you assign to the server?
A. 192.168.19.0 255.255.255.0
B. 192.168.19.33 255.255.255.240
C. 192.168.19.26 255.255.255.248
D. 192.168.19.31 255.255.255.248
E. 192.168.19.34 255.255.255.240
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C. A /29 is
255.255.255.248, which is a block size of 8 in the fourth octet. The subnets
are 0, 8, 16, 24, 32, 40, etc. 192.168.19.24 is the 24 subnet, and since 32 is
the next subnet, the broadcast address for the 24 subnet is 31. 192.168.19.26
is the only correct answer.
You have an interface
on a router with the IP address of 192.168.192.10/29. What is the broadcast
address the hosts will use on this LAN?
A. 192.168.192.15
B. 192.168.192.31
C. 192.168.192.63
D. 192.168.192.127
E. 192.168.192.255
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A /29
(255.255.255.248) has a block size of 8 in the fourth octet. This means the
subnets are 0, 8, 16, 24, etc. 10 is in the 8 subnet. The next subnet is 16, so
15 is the broadcast address.
You need to subnet a
network that has 5 subnets, each with at least 16 hosts. Which classful subnet
mask would you use?
A. 255.255.255.192
B. 255.255.255.224
C. 255.255.255.240
D. 255.255.255.248
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B. You need 5 subnets,
each with at least 16 hosts. The mask 255.255.255.240 provides 16 subnets with
14 hostsâ€"this will not work. The mask 255.255.255.224 provides 8
subnets, each with 30 hosts. This is the best answer.
You configure a router
interface with the IP address 192.168.10.62 255.255.255.192 and receive the
following error:
Bad mask /26 for address 192.168.10.62
Why did you receive this error?
A. You typed this mask on a WAN link and that is not allowed.
B. This is not a valid host and subnet mask combination.
C. ip subnet-zero is not enabled on the router.
D. The router does not support IP.
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C. First, you cannot
answer this question if you cant subnet. The 192.168.10.62 with a mask of
255.255.255.192 is a block size of 64 in the fourth octet. The host
192.168.10.62 is in the zero subnet, and the error occurred because ip
subnet-zero is not enabled on the router
Using the following illustration,
what would the IP address of E0 if you were using the eighth subnet? The
network ID is 192.168.10.0/28 and you need to use the last available IP address
in the range. The zero subnet should not be considered valid for this question.
A. 192.168.10.142
B. 192.168.10.66
C. 192.168.100.254
D. 192.168.10.143
E. 192.168.10.126
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192.168.10.142
If an Ethernet port on
a router were assigned an IP address of 172.16.112.1/25, what would be the
valid subnet address of this interface?
A. 172.16.112.0
B. 172.16.0.0
C. 172.16.96.0
D. 172.16.255.0
E. 172.16.128.0
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A /25 mask is
255.255.255.128. Used with a Class B network, the third and fourth octets are
used for subnetting with a total of 9 subnet bits, 8 bits in the third octet
and 1 bit in the fourth octet. Since there is only 1 bit in the fourth octet,
the bit is either off or on which is a value of 0 or 128. The host in the
question is in the 0 subnet, which has a broadcast address of 127 since 112.128
is the next subnet.
Using the illustration
from the previous question, what would be the IP address of S0 if you were
using the first subnet? The network ID is 192.168.10.0/28 and you need to use
the last available IP address in the range. Again, the zero subnet should not
be considered valid for this question.
A. 192.168.10.24
B. 192.168.10.62
C. 192.168.10.30
D. 192.168.10.127
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C. A /28 is a
255.255.255.240 mask. The first subnet is 16 (remember that the question stated
not to use subnet zero) and the next subnet is 32, so our broadcast address is
31. This makes our host range 1730. 30 is the last valid host.
Which configuration
command must be in effect to allow the use of 8 subnets if the Class C subnet
mask is 255.255.255.224?
A. Router(config)#ip classless
B. Router(config)#ip version 6
C. Router(config)#no ip classful
D. Router(config)#ip unnumbered
E. Router(config)#ip subnet-zero
F. Router(config)#ip all-nets
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E. A Class C subnet
mask of 255.255.255.224 is 3 bits on and 5 bits off (11100000) and provides 8
subnets, each with 30 hosts. However, if the command ip subnet-zero is not
used, then only 6 subnets would be available for use.
You have a network
with a subnet of 172.16.17.0/22. Which is the valid host address?
A. 172.16.17.1 255.255.255.252
B. 172.16.0.1 255.255.240.0
C. 172.16.20.1 255.255.254.0
D. 172.16.16.1 255.255.255.240
E. 172.16.18.255 255.255.252.0
F. 172.16.0.1 255.255.255.0
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E. A Class B network
ID with a /22 mask is 255.255.252.0, with a block size of 4 in the third octet.
The network address in the question is in subnet 172.16.16.0 with a broadcast
address of 172.16.19.255. Only option E has the correct subnet mask listed, and
172.16.18.255 is a valid host.
Your router has the
following IP address on Ethernet0: 172.16.2.1/23. Which of the following can be
valid host IDs on the LAN interface attached to the router? (Choose two.)
A. 172.16.0.5
B. 172.16.1.100
C. 172.16.1.198
D. 172.16.2.255
E. 172.16.3.0
F. 172.16.3.255
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D,E The router’s IP
address on the E0 interface is 172.16.2.1/23, which is 255.255.254.0. This
makes the third octet a block size of 2. The router’s interface is in the 2.0
subnet, and the broadcast address is 3.255 because the next subnet is 4.0. The
valid host range is 2.1 through 3.254. The router i
To test the IP stack
on your local host, which IP address would you ping?
A. 172.0.0.1
B. 1.0.0.127
C. 127.0.0.1
D. 127.255.255.255
E. 255.255.255.255
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C. To test the local
stack on your host, ping the loopback interface of 127.0.0.1.