INTRODUCTION TO SCALING NETWORKS

123456789101112131415
Across
  1. 1. Displays any ports with security activated.
  2. 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.
  3. 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.
  4. 9. This command displays information about the routing protocols configured.
  5. 11. This command displays all interfaces with IP addressing information and interface and line protocol status.
  6. 12. It means the number of users on a network typically grows over time, this means the switch should provide the opportunity for growth.
  7. 14. is the number of port available on a single switch.
  8. 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
  1. 2. This command displays all secure MAC addresses configured on all switch interfaces.
  2. 3. This command displays information about the routed protocol that is enabled and the protocol status of interfaces.
  3. 4. Developed by CISCO as a proprietary distance vector routing protocol with enhanced capabilities.
  4. 5. Define the processing capabilities of a switch by rating how much data the switch can process per second.
  5. 6. allows the switch to deliver power to a device over the existing Ethernet cabling.
  6. 8. This command displays interfaces with line (protocol) status, bandwidth, delay, reliability, encapsulation, duplex, and I/O statistics.
  7. 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.
  8. 13. It means the switch should provide continuous access to the network.