Ccna routing and Switching Complete Study Guide



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Todd Lammle-CCNA Routing and Switching Complete Study Guide Exam 100-105, Exam 200-105, Exam 200-125-Sybex (2016)

A. DHCP

B. SMTP

C. SNMP

D. FTP

E. HTTP

F. TFTP


Review Questions 

133

11.  Which Class of IP addresses uses the pattern shown here?

Network


Network

Network


Host

A.  Class A

B.  Class B

C.  Class C

D.  Class D

12.  Which of the following is an example of a multicast address?

A. 10.6.9.1

B. 192.168.10.6

C. 224.0.0.10

D. 172.16.9.5

13.  The following illustration shows a data structure header. What protocol is this header from?

4-Bit


Header

Length


Reserved

Flags


16-Bit Window Size

16-Bit Destination Port

16-Bit Source Port

16-bit Urgent Pointer

16-bit TCP Checksum

32-Bit Sequence Number

32-Bit Acknowledgement Number

Options


Data

A. IP

B. ICMP

C. TCP

D. UDP

E. ARP

F. RARP

14.  If you use either Telnet or FTP, what layer are you using to generate the data?

A. Application

B. Presentation

C. Session

D. Transport


134

 

Chapter 3 



  Introduction to TCP/IP 



15.  The DoD model (also called the TCP/IP stack) has four layers. Which layer of the DoD 

model is equivalent to the Network layer of the OSI model?



A. Application

B. Host-to-Host

C. Internet

D.  Network Access

16.  Which two of the following are private IP addresses?

A. 12.0.0.1

B. 168.172.19.39

C. 172.20.14.36

D. 172.33.194.30

E. 192.168.24.43

17.  What layer in the TCP/IP stack is equivalent to the Transport layer of the OSI model?

A. Application

B. Host-to-Host

C. Internet

D.  Network Access

18.  Which statements are true regarding ICMP packets? (Choose two.)

A.  ICMP guarantees datagram delivery.

B.  ICMP can provide hosts with information about network problems.

C.  ICMP is encapsulated within IP datagrams.

D.  ICMP is encapsulated within UDP datagrams.

19.  What is the address range of a Class B network address in binary?

A. 01xxxxxx

B. 0xxxxxxx

C. 10xxxxxx

D. 110xxxxx

20.  Drag the steps in the DHCP process and place them in the correct order on the right.

DHCPOffer

Drop Target A

DHCPDiscover

Drop Target B

DHCPAck


Drop Target C

DHCPRequest

Drop Target D



Easy Subnetting

ThE following iCnD1 Exam TopiCS 

arE CovErED in ThiS ChapTEr:

 



Network Fundamentals 

 



1.8 Configure, verify, and troubleshoot IPv4 addressing and 

subnetting



Chapter 

4


We’ll pick up right where we left off in the last chapter and 

continue to explore the world of IP addressing. I’ll open this 

chapter by telling you how to subnet an IP network—an 

indispensably crucial skill that’s central to mastering networking in general! Forewarned 

is forearmed, so prepare yourself because being able to subnet quickly and accurately is 

pretty challenging and you’ll need time to practice what you’ve learned to really nail it. So 

be patient and don’t give up on this key aspect of networking until your skills are seriously 

sharp. I’m not kidding—this chapter is so important you should really just graft it into your 

brain!

So be ready because we’re going to hit the ground running and thoroughly cover IP 



subnetting from the very start. And though I know this will sound weird to you, you’ll 

be much better off if you just try to forget everything you’ve learned about subnetting 

before reading this chapter—especially if you’ve been to an official Cisco or Microsoft 

class! I think these forms of special torture often do more harm than good and sometimes 

even scare people away from networking completely. Those that survive and persevere 

usually at least question the sanity of continuing to study in this field. If this is you, 

relax, breathe, and know that you’ll find that the way I tackle the issue of subnetting is 

relatively painless because I’m going to show you a whole new, much easier method to 

conquer this monster!

After working through this chapter, and I can’t say this enough, after working through 

the extra study material at the end as well, you’ll be able to tame the IP addressing/subnet-

ting beast—just don’t give up! I promise that you’ll be really glad you didn’t. It’s one of 

those things that once you get it down, you’ll wonder why you used to think it was so hard!

To find up-to-the minute updates for this chapter, please see 

www.lammle 

.com/ccna

 or the book’s web page at 

www.sybex.com/go/ccna

.

Subnetting Basics



In Chapter 3, “Introduction to TCP/IP,” you learned how to define and find the valid host 

ranges used in a Class A, Class B, and Class C network address by turning the host bits 

all off and then all on. This is very good, but here’s the catch: you were defining only one 

network, as shown in Figure 4.1.




Subnetting Basics 

137

f i g u r E   4 .1     One network

.130

.130


.131

.132


.2

.3

.4



.5

192.168.10.0/24

. . . . . . . . . 

One large broadcast domain!

By now you know that having one large network is not a good thing because the first 

three chapters you just read were veritably peppered with me incessantly telling you that! 

But how would you fix the out-of-control problem that Figure 4.1 illustrates? Wouldn’t 

it be nice to be able to break up that one, huge network address and create four manage-

able networks from it? You betcha it would, but to make that happen, you would need 

to apply the infamous trick of subnetting because it’s the best way to break up a giant 

network into a bunch of smaller ones. Take a look at Figure 4.2 and see how this might 

look.


f i g u r E   4 . 2     Multiple networks connected together

192.168.10.64

192.168.10.96

192.168.10.32

192.168.10.0

What are those 192.168.10.x addresses shown in the figure? Well that is what this chap-

ter will explain—how to make one network into many networks!

Let’s take off from where we left in Chapter 3 and start working in the host section (host 

bits) of a network address, where we can borrow bits to create subnets.



138

 

Chapter 4 



  Easy Subnetting




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