Topic 2: Exam Pool B
How does CEF switching differ from process switching on Cisco devices?
A.
CEF switching saves memory by sorting adjacency tables in dedicate memory on the line cards, and process switching stores all tables in the main memory
B.
CEF switching uses adjacency tables built by the CDP protocol, and process switching uses the routing table
C.
CEF switching uses dedicated hardware processors, and process switching uses the main processor
D.
CEF switching uses proprietary protocol based on IS-IS for MAC address lookup, and process switching uses in MAC address table
CEF switching uses adjacency tables built by the CDP protocol, and process switching uses the routing table
Explanation:
Cisco Express Forwarding (CEF) switching is a proprietary form of scalable switching intended to tackle the problems associated with demand caching. With CEF switching, the information which is conventionally stored in a route cache is split up over several data structures. The CEF code is able to maintain these data structures in the Gigabit Route Processor (GRP), and also in slave processors such as the line cards in the 12000 routers. The data structures that provide optimized lookup for efficient packet forwarding include:
The Forwarding Information Base (FIB) table - CEF uses a FIB to make IP destination prefix-based switching decisions. The FIB is conceptually similar to a routing table or information base. It maintains a mirror image of the forwarding information contained in the IP routing table. When routing or topology changes occur in the network, the IP routing table is updated, and these changes are reflected in the FIB. The FIB maintains next-hop address information based on the information in the IP routing table.
Because there is a one-to-one correlation between FIB entries and routing table entries, the FIB contains all known routes and eliminates the need for route cache maintenance that is associated with switching paths such as fast switching and optimum switching. Adjacency table - Nodes in the network are said to be adjacent if they can reach each other with a single hop across a link layer. In addition to the FIB, CEF uses adjacency tables to prepend Layer 2 addressing information. The adjacency table maintains Layer 2 next-hop addresses for all FIB entries.
CEF can be enabled in one of two modes:
Central CEF mode - When CEF mode is enabled, the CEF FIB and adjacency tables reside on the route processor, and the route processor performs the express forwarding. You can use CEF mode when line cards are not available for CEF switching, or when you need to use features not compatible with distributed CEF switching.
Distributed CEF (dCEF) mode - When dCEF is enabled, line cards maintain identical copies of the FIB and adjacency tables. The line cards can perform the express forwarding by themselves, relieving the main processor - Gigabit Route Processor (GRP) - of involvement in the switching operation. This is the only switching method available on the Cisco 12000 Series Router.
dCEF uses an Inter-Process Communication (IPC) mechanism to ensure synchronization of FIBs and adjacency tables on the route processor and line cards. For more information about CEF switching, see Cisco Express Forwarding (CEF) White Paper.
Refer to the exhibit.
Which type of antenna does the radiation pattern represent?
A.
Yagi
B.
multidirectional
C.
directional patch
D.
omnidirectional
Yagi
By default, which virtual MAC address does HSRP group 16 use?
A.
c0:41:43:64:13:10
B.
00:00:0c 07:ac:10
C.
00:05:5c:07:0c:16
D.
05:00:0c:07:ac:16
00:00:0c 07:ac:10
Explanation: The last two-digit hex value in the MAC address presents the HSRP group number. In this case 16 in decimal is 10 in hexadecimal
Refer to the exhibit.
A.
Option A
B.
Option B
C.
Option C
D.
Option D
Option A
What is the responsibility of a secondary WLC?
A.
It shares the traffic load of the LAPs with the primary controller.
B.
It avoids congestion on the primary controller by sharing the registration load on the LAPs.
C.
It registers the LAPs if the primary controller fails.
D.
It enables Layer 2 and Layer 3 roaming between Itself and the primary controller.
E.
It enables Layer 2 and Layer 3 roaming between Itself and the primary controller.
It registers the LAPs if the primary controller fails.
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