Today’s post just lists the answers to the Mask Design drill #2. The drill lists some basic requirements for a number of hosts per subnet, and a number of subnets, and a network class. Your job: [...]
Here’s another mask design drill, with the same idea as the previous two posts (chronologically speaking). For those of you with my ICND1 book, Chapter 16 spells out the details, and you can just [...]
Today’s post just lists the answers to the Mask Design drill #1. The drill lists some basic requirements for a number of hosts per subnet, and a number of subnets, and a network class. Your job: [...]
Today’s post answers the five questions in a previously posted exercise. What’s it about? Someone came before us at most every company and made up an IP addressing plan. These exams test our [...]
Someone came before us at most every company and made up an IP addressing plan. These exams test our ability to look at that plan and decipher what the plan does, including answering this [...]
Today’s post shows the solution to subnet design exercise 3, specifically the IP subnets. This post isn’t all that meaningful without reading the other one first – after that, [...]
The subnet design exercises require that you do some subnetting math, but rather than reacting like you would in a help desk or support job role, you plan as if you were in the role of a [...]
Today’s post shows the solution to subnet design exercise 2, specifically the IP subnets. This post isn’t all that meaningful without reading the other one first – after that, [...]
Today’s exercise requires a little more thought than most of my exercise posts. In this case, you’ll start with two class B networks: 172.20.0.0 and 172.30.0.0. The problem also lists a set [...]
Today’s post picks up the discussion of the solution to the subnet design exercise I posted a while back. Start with the post for the original problem statement, and read from there!