270
Appendix
■
Answers to Practice Test Questions
89. B. Hubs do not participate in IEEE negotiation, and therefore the speed will be detected.
However, since duplex cannot be negotiated, 10 Mb/s and 100 Mb/s connections will be
half-duplex and 1000 Mb/s connections will be full-duplex. Therefore the switch interface
will be set to 100 Mb/s half-duplex.
90. C. The
show interfaces status command will display the port number, description,
connected status, VLAN, duplex, speed, and type of interface. The command
show run is
incorrect. The command
show interfaces counters is incorrect. The command show
counters interfaces is incorrect.
91. A. The Transport layer is responsible for flow control via the TCP/IP protocols of TCP
and UDP. The Network layer is responsible for logical addressing of network nodes. The
Data Link layer is responsible for the framing of data and the physical addressing of local
nodes. The Session layer is responsible for the setup of the dialog between two hosts.
92. C. User Datagram Protocol (UDP) does not guarantee segments are delivered. Therefore,
the programmer must account for segments that are never received or out of order. Sockets
Layer (SSL) is a protocol used to encrypt a network transmission. Transmission allows
for the network to automatically deal with lost segments because TCP guarantees
segments are delivered. Network management station (NMS) is a term used with Simple
Network Management Protocol (SNMP) to describe the collecting host for SNMP
messages.
93. D. TCP is a connection-based protocol via the three-way handshake. It is not faster than
UDP. However, it allows for the retransmission of lost segments because of sequences and
acknowledgments. TCP does not allow or account for error correction, only the detection
of errors and lost or missing segments.
94. A. The sender allocates a port dynamically above 1024 and associates it with the request
through a process called a handle. This way, if a web browser creates three requests for
three different web pages, the pages are loaded to their respective windows. The receiver
will respond back to the requesting port dynamically allocated to the request (over 1024);
these ports are also known as ephemeral ports. Dynamic allocation is always over 1024,
not below 1024, and it is always the responsibility of the sender, not the receiver.
95. D. The Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) uses TCP port 25 to send mail. The Trivial
File Transfer Protocol (TFTP) uses UDP/69 for communications. The Dynamic Host
Configuration Protocol (DHCP) uses UDP/68 for communications. The Domain Name
protocol uses UDP/53 for communications.
96. D. TCP guarantees delivery of segments with sequence and acknowledgment numbers.
At the Transport layer, each segment is given a sequence number that is acknowledged by
the receiver. The source and destination ports are used for the delivery of segments, but
they do not guarantee delivery. TCP checksums are used to detect errors in segments but
do not guarantee delivery. Window size is used to adjust buffer size on the sending and
receiving hosts.
Chapter 1: Network Fundamentals (Domain 1)
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |