Cisco CCNA, CCNP, And CCENT Practice Questions: Telnet, VLANs, and more!
Test your knowledge of important Cisco certification exam topics with these CCENT, CCNA, and CCNP practice questions! Topics include Telnet, dynamic VLANs, and password encryption.
Test your knowledge of important Cisco certification exam topics with these CCENT, CCNA, and CCNP practice questions!
CCENT and CCNA Certification:
You’ve just configured a password for users that will use Telnet to connect to your router. A few questions…
1. In the running configurations, where will the passwords appear?
2. At which layer of the OSI model does Telnet run?
3. Is the password encrypted by default?
Cisco CCNA, CCNP, And CCENT Practice Questions: Telnet, VLANs, and more!
Test your knowledge of important Cisco certification exam topics with these CCENT, CCNA, and CCNP practice questions! Topics include Telnet, dynamic VLANs, and password encryption.
Test your knowledge of important Cisco certification exam topics with these CCENT, CCNA, and CCNP practice questions!
CCENT and CCNA Certification:
You’ve just configured a password for users that will use Telnet to connect to your router. A few questions…
1. In the running configurations, where will the passwords appear?
2. At which layer of the OSI model does Telnet run?
3. Is the password encrypted by default?
Cisco Ccna Certification - Cisco Vtp Vlan Trunking Protocol
(VTP) is a Cisco Layer 2 messaging protocol that manages the addition, deletion, and renaming of VLANs on a network-wide basis. Virtual Local AreaNetwork (VLAN) Trunk Protocol (VTP) reduces administration in a switched network. When you configure a new VLAN on one VTP server, the VLAN is distributed through all switches in the domain. This reduces the need to configure the same VLAN everywhere. VTP is a Cisco-proprietary protocol that is available on most of the Cisco Catalyst Family products. VTP ensures that all switches in the VTP domain are aware of all VLANs. There are occasions, however, when VTP can create unnecessary traffic. All unknown unicasts and broadcasts in a VLAN are flooded over the entire VLAN. All switches in the network receive all broadcasts, even in situations where few users are connected in that VLAN. VTP pruning is a feature used to eliminate (or prune) this unnecessary traffic. By default, all Cisco Catalyst switches are configured to be VTP servers. This is suitable for small-scale networks where the size of the VLAN information is small and easily stored in all switches (in NVRAM). In a large network, a judgment call must be made at some point when the NVRAM storage needed is wasted, because it is duplicated on every switch. At this point, the network administrator should choose a few well-equipped switches and keep them as VTP servers. Everything else participating in VTP can be turned into a client. The number of VTP servers should be chosen so as to provide the degree of redundancy desired in the network.