298
Appendix
■
Answers to Practice Test Questions
120. B. The RSTP path cost is the calculation of all of the link costs that lead back to the
root bridge. The link cost is a numeric value that signifies the speed. The lower the cost,
the higher the speed of the link. The path cost is not related to the latency of the frame
traversing the link. There is also no monetary cost associated with a link because it
pertains to STP link cost. The path cost is not a numeric value associated with the speed
of a link; this would be the link cost, not the path cost.
121. B. Per-VLAN Spanning Tree+ (PVST+) elects a root bridge for each VLAN and creates
a topology table for each VLAN. It is a Cisco proprietary protocol due to the bridge ID
calculation it must perform for each VLAN. The IEEE 802.1w specification details Rapid
Spanning Tree Protocol (RSTP). The Common Spanning Tree (CST) protocol assumes
one spanning tree instance for all VLANs. RSTP is the Spanning Tree Protocol that has
superseded the original Spanning Tree Protocol.
122. A. Rapid Per-VLAN Spanning Tree+ elects a root bridge for each VLAN. It allows for fast
convergence times and logical placement of the root bridge. However, it requires the most
CPU and RAM of all implementations. Per VLAN Spanning Tree (PVST) operates similar
to PVST+; however, it transmits 802.1D BPDUs. The Common Spanning Tree protocol
assumes one spanning tree instance for all VLANs. There is no protocol called the RSTP+
protocol; therefore, it is an invalid answer.
123. B. Common Spanning Tree (CST) elects a single root bridge for the entire network and
all of the VLANs. This creates a problem when the center of your network may vary upon
VLAN placement. CST is a variant of STP; therefore, it has slower convergence times.
CST should not be used in really large networks because the root switch for the various
VLANs may be in different locations on the network. CST elects only one root bridge for
all VLANs, which could cause a problem.
124. B. RSTP has three transition modes and converges faster than STP, which is 50 seconds.
It is, however, backward compatible with STP 802.1D. RSTP by itself does not allow for
multiple root bridges; however, the extension of Rapid PVST will allow for multiple root
bridges. RSTP has an extremely fast convergence time, and STP has a convergence time of
50 seconds. STP has five port states to which an interface could possibly transition; RTSP
has only three port states.
125. B. Each switch is responsible for sensing changes to the topology; it is not the sole
responsibility of the root bridge. Whenever the topology changes, a Topology Change
Notification (TCN) is sent out all root ports and an acknowledgment is sent back. This
happens until the root bridge sends back a notification. The root bridge does not poll each
switch participating in STP for changes, and the switches participating in STP do not poll
the root bridge for changes.
126. B. 802.1s, which is called Multiple Spanning Tree (MST), is a standard based upon
PVST+. It is an open standard created by the IEEE that will allow Per-VLAN Spanning
in multi-vendor switched networks. 802.1X is the IEEE standard for port security that
requires end devices to authenticate before traffic will be allowed to pass. The original
IEEE specification of STP (802.1D) was revamped in 2004 with RSTP 802.1w. This
revamping of STP was to fix problems with the original specification.
Chapter 2: Network Access (Domain 2)
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |