INTRODUCTION TO SCALING NETWORKS
Across
- 1. Displays any ports with security activated.
- 3. This command displays about OSPF neighbors that have been learned, including the Router ID of the neighbor, the priority, the state, the IP address, & the local interface that learned of the neighbor.
- 7. This command displays all MAC addresses that the switch has learned, how those addresses were learned(dynamic/static), the port number, and the VLAN assigned to the port.
- 9. This command displays information about the routing protocols configured.
- 11. This command displays all interfaces with IP addressing information and interface and line protocol status.
- 12. It means the number of users on a network typically grows over time, this means the switch should provide the opportunity for growth.
- 14. is the number of port available on a single switch.
- 15. This command displays routing table information, including routing codes, known networks, administrative distance and metrics, how routes were learned, next hop, static routes and default routes.
Down
- 2. This command displays all secure MAC addresses configured on all switch interfaces.
- 3. This command displays information about the routed protocol that is enabled and the protocol status of interfaces.
- 4. Developed by CISCO as a proprietary distance vector routing protocol with enhanced capabilities.
- 5. Define the processing capabilities of a switch by rating how much data the switch can process per second.
- 6. allows the switch to deliver power to a device over the existing Ethernet cabling.
- 8. This command displays interfaces with line (protocol) status, bandwidth, delay, reliability, encapsulation, duplex, and I/O statistics.
- 10. This command displays interface information, including protocol status, IP address, whether a helper address is configured, and whether ACL is enabled on the interface.
- 13. It means the switch should provide continuous access to the network.