Answers: Layer 3 Switching 2
This lab asks you to configure layer 3 switching. Along the way, you get a pretty good review of other LAN switching config basics as well. By Config Lab standards, this lab is long enough to forget what the lab
This lab asks you to configure layer 3 switching. Along the way, you get a pretty good review of other LAN switching config basics as well. By Config Lab standards, this lab is long enough to forget what the lab
This next lab is one of the longer labs in this config lab series. The lab includes some simple tasks to configure 802.1Q trunking and to create VLANs. The big focus of the lab however is to enable layer 3
Layer 3 switches can be configured with a couple of different kinds of layer 3 interfaces: Switched Virtual Interfaces (SVIs), also called VLAN interfaces, as well as routed interfaces. Today’s lab gives you practice with both features, along with L3
Layer 3 switches, SVIs, routed ports, and L3 EtherChannels. Those topics alone make this lab fairly advanced for CCNA prep, not to mention that the L3 EtherChannel and routed ports are new to CCNA for this latest (2016) version of
The configuration for this latest lab is relatively simple. However, it definitely helps you solidify your understanding of IPv4 routing, and that is something you should definitely master along the way. As always, start by checking on the lab
One of the best ways to learn IPv4 routing is to think hard about IPv4 static routes. Today’s lab gives you more of that with a typical config lab. It starts with a topology and with IPv4 addresses configured. Your
Try a little subnetting math for a quick review, and add some IP address configuration – short, sweet, and just one more quick round of practice. Check out the initial requirements in this post, and come back here for the
More daily lab practice! This one combines a little bit of subnetting math with IP address configuration. If you know how to calculate the IP addresses in a subnet, and you know how to configure IP addresses, make this one