Sometimes #CCNA and #CCENT candidates struggle the first few times they have to apply layer 2 switching concepts and layer 3 routing concepts in the same question. That’s normal – [...]
Today’s post wraps up this latest sample #CCENT exam question. Answer is below the fold. Relevant Links: The original question Related analysis of the question Other Q&A in this blog
In many ways, the #CCENT and #CCNA are all about practice. Yes, you need to learn, but you need to practice applying what you learned if you want to do well on the exams. Today’s post looks at [...]
For #CCENT and #CCNA, you need to know how switches learn, plus you need to know how switches forward frames. Sometimes, combining the two concepts (learning and forwarding) for the first time [...]
This post wraps up the #CCNA Q&A focused on how routers add routes to their routing tables. What happens when a router happens to learn three separate routes for the same subnet ID – but with [...]
This latest #CCNA question takes us in the same direction as the previous question: how does a router choose between different competing routes? Today’s question adds connected routes to the mix, [...]
What happens when a router happens to learn three separate routes for the same subnet ID – but with different masks, and with different routing protocols? What should you be thinking about when [...]
#CCNA study scenarios often focus on the most common and most obvious combinations of events. However, sometimes it helps to think about some more unusual scenarios just for the purpose of [...]
This post lists a #CCNA question, but it’s a doozy. One of the toughest tasks when studying for CCNA is putting all the pieces together, and this question tests whether you can or [...]