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Question

Your network contains the segments shown in the following table.



You have servers that run Windows Server and are configured as shown in the following table.



You deploy a server named Server4 that runs Windows Server and has a static IP address of 172.16.1.1. You connect Server4 to Segment1.

For each of the following statements, select Yes if the statement is true. Otherwise, select No.

NOTE: Each correct selection is worth one point,

 

Proposed answer

Suggested answer

Correct answer

The suggested answer is incorrect

  1. No - Server 1 will try to send packet via default router, but server 2 is in the same subnet
  2. No - Server 2 assumes that server 3 in the same subnet, but it is not
  3. No - This will happen when ip address cannot be obtained via dhcp
Comments
Lionred

Highly Voted 7 months, 3 weeks ago 

Answer should be No, No, No. 2nd answer: server 2 has 172.16.2.2 but is on 172.16.1.0/24 subnet, it cannot talk to anyone else on the same segment that hasn't got IP address in the subnet of 172.16.2.0/24

upvoted 11 times 

Ksk08

Most Recent 4 weeks, 1 day ago 

"Server1 can successfully ping Server2 by using the name of Server2" Answer: No Explanation: While both servers are in Segment1, there's no indication of a DNS server or name resolution service being configured. ICMP traffic is allowed, but name resolution wouldn't work. "Server2 can successfully ping Server3 by using the IP address of Server3" Answer: No Explanation: Server2 and Server3 are in different segments (Segment1 and Segment2), and there's no routing configuration shown between segments. "Running ipconfig /all on Server4 will display an IP address from the 169.254.0.0/16 IPv4 address space" Answer: No Explanation: Server4 has a static IP address of 172.16.1.1 configured. The 169.254.0.0/16 range is for APIPA (Automatic Private IP Addressing) which is only used when DHCP fails and no static IP is configured.

upvoted 1 times 

juicy136016

2 months, 2 weeks ago 

i dont have these questions in the list that examtopics provided, please forward this to me

upvoted 1 times 

RemmyT

4 months, 2 weeks ago 

NO : Server1 can successfully ping Server2 by using the name of Server2. - different IP class on the same physical network NO : Server2 can successfully ping Server3 by using the IP address of Server3. - the same IP class but different location separated by a network device to route to traffic YES: Running ipconfig /all on Server4 will display an IP address from the 169.254.0.0/16 IPv4 address space. - Server4 with the same IP address as Segment1 gateway (IP duplicated)

upvoted 1 times 

Mr_K

4 months, 2 weeks ago 

Server 4 has a static IP, despite it conflicting with Segment1 gateway

upvoted 1 times 

AK_1234

6 months, 2 weeks ago 

Correct : No , Yes , No

upvoted 2 times 

Kuikz

7 months, 3 weeks ago 

not sure if 2nd answer is "NO"... A segment is not the same as a subnet: "A segment refers to a portion of a network that is physically or logically separated from other parts of the network. Segments can be separated by routers, switches, or other network devices." The question does not mention any restrictions regarding the gateway, thus i think server 2 can ping the IP of server 3. They belong to the same subnet 172.16.2.0/24 I will go with YES for second one

upvoted 2 times 

Hull1

2 months, 1 week ago 

You're forgetting that a successful ping is a two way street. You can say that a ping leaving Server2 will reach Server3 if ping coming from Server2 reaches the gateway. Issue is the response, IP of server2 belongs to Segment2, in which Server3 resides. When server3 sends a response back to Segment2 gateway, it will think that the computer is in its own network and doesn't need to go outside of it, but that's not the case. It would need to send the ping back to Segment1 but it won't do that, unless there is some static routing which isn't defined.

upvoted 1 times 

Krayzr

2 months, 2 weeks ago 

you got an excellent point

upvoted 1 times