Free CCNA | Static Routing | Day 11 (part 2) | CCNA 200-301 Complete Course

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 10 май 2024
  • Free CCNA 200-301 flashcards/Packet Tracer labs for the course: jitl.jp/ccna-files
    📖 My CCNA Book: www.manning.com/books/acing-t...
    📚Boson ExSim: jitl.jp/ccna-exsim ← the BEST practice exams for CCNA
    💻Boson NetSim: jitl.jp/ccna-netsim ← 100+ detailed guided labs for CCNA
    💯ExSim + NetSim: jitl.jp/ccna-kit ← get BOTH for a discount!
    🥇CCNA Gold Bootcamp: www.flackbox.com/cisco-ccna-c... ← the course I used to get my CCNA (top rated course on the Internet)
    Get the course ad-free with bonus quizzes and more on JITL Academy: courses.jeremysitlab.com
    In Day 11 (part 2) of this free CCNA 200-301 complete course, you will learn about static routing.
    In this FREE and COMPLETE CCNA 200-301 course you will find lecture videos covering all topics in Cisco official exam topics list, end-of-video quizzes to test your knowledge, flashcards to review, and practice labs to get hands-on experience.
    SUPPORT MY CHANNEL
    The best way to support my channel is to like, comment, subscribe, and share my videos to help spread the word!
    If you can spare to leave a tip, here are some options:
    PayPal: paypal.me/jeremysitlabYT
    BAT (Basic Attention Token) tips in the Brave browser (www.jeremysitlab.com/brave-br...)
    ======================
    Patreon: / jeremysitlab
    ======================
    Cryptocurrency Addresses
    Bitcoin: bc1qxjpza7nx46e8a2rtz6vkcrvxx9mfjnufdrk0jv
    Ethereum: 0x08B4325b1B99B05d850A3bfCd4A6620D770cfB64
    ======================
    0:00 Introduction
    1:09 Things we'll cover
    1:47 Connected & Local routes
    6:21 Default Gateway
    10:58 Routing Packets between PC1 & PC4
    13:26 Static Routes: Planning
    17:28 Static Routes: Configuration
    20:21 PC1 to PC4 communication
    23:03 Static Route configuration (exit interface)
    26:08 Default Route
    29:39 Things we covered
    30:35 Quiz 1
    31:24 Quiz 2
    32:18 Quiz 3
    33:40 Quiz 4
    35:03 Quiz 5
    35:54 Thank you to supporters
    Corrections:
    25:48 This isn't exactly true. If you only specify the exit-interface, the router will have to use ARP (Proxy ARP) for every destination it wants to reach, so it can be considered 'worse'. Stick to using the next-hop in your static routes.
    #cisco #CCNA
  • НаукаНаука

Комментарии • 136

  • @JeremysITLab
    @JeremysITLab  Год назад +60

    *## THIS VIDEO WAS ADDED IN 2022 AS AN UPDATE TO THE COURSE ##*
    Day 11 of the course used to have 1 lecture video, but I remade it and split it into two parts:
    Part 1 - Routing Fundamentals: ruclips.net/video/aHwAm8GYbn8/видео.html
    Part 2 - Static Routing (this video)
    Part 1 covers basics like how to view the routing table, Connected routes, Local routes, and route selection (most specific matching route).
    Part 2 covers how to configure static routes, giving a router the ability to forward packets toward destinations that are outside of the router's own connected networks.
    Old Day 11 video: ruclips.net/video/M7F_ljN0IdA/видео.html

    • @mazenlatif6722
      @mazenlatif6722 Год назад +3

      Hey jeremy i just wanted to mention that the CCNA includes port forwarding and proxy ARP .

    • @chindianajones3742
      @chindianajones3742 Год назад +1

      these 2 videos were excellent. The old video is good too, but these new ones help clear up all of the material for Day 11. Thanks!

    • @janearltocson2965
      @janearltocson2965 10 месяцев назад

      Hi sir Jeremy, where can I find the Lab in these 2 updated lessons? Is there new Lab for these 2 lessons or the old Lab still the exercise in these 2 lessons? Thank for the answer.

    • @chindianajones3742
      @chindianajones3742 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@janearltocson2965 i believe the google drive repository that jeremy provides us with for this course has all of the latest PT labs and flashcards. iirc i dont think there are any new labs for day 11 that go along with the new videos.

    • @janearltocson2965
      @janearltocson2965 10 месяцев назад

      @@chindianajones3742 Thank you for the answer sir. Last question sir. So, after this 2 lessons I will proceed to that Lab 1 published 3 years ago right sir?

  • @tadgarien1483
    @tadgarien1483 Год назад +176

    Just wanted to share... passed my CCNA first try yesterday!! Thank you Jeremy, I watched and worked through your entire free course and prepped with Boson ExSim tests. For everyone on day 11 (part 2) of their journey, stick to it and keep up with the labs and flashcards!!!

    • @JeremysITLab
      @JeremysITLab  Год назад +8

      Congrats Tad! Well done :)

    • @Rizes13
      @Rizes13 Год назад +26

      I haven't pass my exam yet, but at day 24 was able to get my first IT job as Sys Admin because of knowledge earned by this course. Good luck everyone.

    • @edriceedesign
      @edriceedesign Год назад +7

      @@Rizes13 congrats on getting your foot in the door before passing the exam. did you have any IT history on your resume?

    • @Rizes13
      @Rizes13 Год назад +23

      ​@@edriceedesign
      4 years of IT profiled High school, 3 years in "weekend" College. Had troubles finding the job. Made a professional CV photo, marked on my CV that I'm learning towards my CCNA, passed ITIL v4 funded by college. Got an interview, got asks like:
      -What is PoE, how u can use it, what devices,
      -What is auto-negotation, what happens when it's disabled,
      -Difference between Intel and Xeon,
      -How does dual-channel works,
      -What is routing,
      -What is access mode, what is trunk,
      And more networking stuff which I don't remember, but nothing really hard.
      When i asked my interviewers about the question and why They picked those (which doesn't fit the job so much), They told me, that if i knew that stuff I'm gonna be able to learn new, because that shows I'm learning by myself.

    • @edriceedesign
      @edriceedesign Год назад +8

      @@Rizes13 good stuff man, thanks for all the insight.

  • @deardiso9193
    @deardiso9193 Год назад +27

    Dude, yesterday was the day that i read the holy words:
    "Congratulations you passed the exam"
    Now i'm going into CCNP ENCOR.
    Thank you for your content :) i really enjoy every second.

  • @bladeonvhs9460
    @bladeonvhs9460 10 месяцев назад +18

    This was by far the hardest section so far. Your teaching is absolutely university level, I can't thank you enough for using colours on the router interfaces. Thank you again!

    • @oozy814
      @oozy814 7 месяцев назад +1

      Agreed! I have to rewatch this video several times

  • @1osmann495
    @1osmann495 4 месяца назад +5

    Just passed my exam and i wanted to say thank you for everything, you helped me a lot . God bless you and your family.

  • @jacksonkiprop7749
    @jacksonkiprop7749 Год назад +5

    Followed through the series and passed CCNA exam. I have and will always recommend this channel to every person interested in getting the certification. Looking forward to CCNP videos .

  • @zekarias_wolde
    @zekarias_wolde Год назад +4

    you don't know how much I'm gonna feel so glad when I see your new video release

  • @d1m-d1m63
    @d1m-d1m63 Год назад +16

    Jeremy, I would like to Thank You for this course! From 0 knowledge to PASS in first try! One month and two weeks, 4-5 videos everyday, Boson ExSim questions. This helped me a lot with my studies. I would recommend this course to everyone! One important thing - guys, do labs! This helps to better understand the material!

    • @LearningAccount-ro8bg
      @LearningAccount-ro8bg Год назад

      Im going through 3 lecture/labs a day right now, and really enjoying it, the plan is to pass the exam in a similar timeline! :) how much time did you spend on Boson? and was it worth the price tag or do you think I can save the money and just hit the flashcards harder lol
      also, CONGRATS!!

    • @4yoeyezonlee540
      @4yoeyezonlee540 6 месяцев назад

      stop lying, you wad of phlegm.

  • @Andy17385
    @Andy17385 2 месяца назад +1

    Man after these two parts I have some much stuff to compile in my head now, probably asking a lot of questions that have videos later on. Really hard to grasp all this architecture at first, but hopefully in the future all of this becomes easy to navigate through and understand.

  • @tokoiaoben3842
    @tokoiaoben3842 Год назад +1

    Having split the lecture into 2 parts makes learning the Routing concepts very easy to understand. I had to admit that the 1 lecture video on Static Routing was not as easy as the 2-Part videos. I'd always come back to watch your free CCNA videos if I need to refresh on certain topics.Thank you very much for your time and effort you put into this.

  • @IvoSantolaja
    @IvoSantolaja Год назад +1

    Day 11 (part 2) was awesome! Thank you Jeremy!

  • @oosowl522
    @oosowl522 10 месяцев назад +3

    Hardest tutorial video so far , but most enjoyable one . Keep replying the video again and again til you understand everything . Thanks Jeremy!

  • @PrSunflower
    @PrSunflower 2 месяца назад +1

    Thank you for taking time to add colours, it makes it quicker to follow in addition to making it pleasing to look at 😊

  • @maverickmace9100
    @maverickmace9100 Год назад +3

    Much better explanation of gateway of last resort. Thanks for the good work :)

  • @jonathansanchez7010
    @jonathansanchez7010 Год назад +7

    Gracias Jeremy, no soy de habla inglesa, pero con subtitulos tus videos se entienden perfectamente. Yo aprobe mi examen CCNA hace 5 dias y mucho le debo a tus videos explicativos, las practicas con laboratorio y las tarjetas flashcard. Este contenido es muy completo y recomendable para aprobar el examen. Nuevamente, thanks for your help.

    • @wokevns
      @wokevns Год назад

      Também não falo e nem entendo inglês,sorte que temos tradução do RUclips

  • @burulcampbell1328
    @burulcampbell1328 Год назад +1

    Very informative and on point as usual. Thank you so much for your hard work!

  • @majiddehbi9186
    @majiddehbi9186 Год назад +3

    Great to hear u jeremy Nice Day

  • @KareemMohamed643
    @KareemMohamed643 2 дня назад

    if anyone is wondering why he used the 'do' command in showing the ip routes, it's because the do command helps you to run privileged EXEC mode commands from global configuration mode. Thus "do sh ip route" allows you to run the "show ip route" command from global configuration mode.

  • @beardsichilima470
    @beardsichilima470 Год назад +2

    just passed my CCNA exam on first attempt, very informative, i recommend everyone preparing for your CCNA to study and watch all the videos from here . thank you @Jeremy's IT Lab 😇, we start the CCNP Journey

    • @Lili-jy5qp
      @Lili-jy5qp 10 месяцев назад

      was the lab questions in exam easy? and what was it about?
      and how did you study? was watching his videos and doing the labs and flash cards enough to pass? or did you used other sources

    • @officerdooderino5266
      @officerdooderino5266 9 месяцев назад

      @@Lili-jy5qp mind your business man. they cant disclose the information

  • @gracelesstarnished573
    @gracelesstarnished573 Год назад +4

    The most overwhelming video so far. It was worth it 😅

  • @julienmoulin9841
    @julienmoulin9841 Год назад +1

    Thank you Jeremy!

  • @nicktucker3437
    @nicktucker3437 10 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for the great instruction/content. 24:50 pointing packets out of a broadcast interface without explicitly defining the next hop is slightly undesirable as it will cause this device to use extra cpu/memory to arp for all unknown destinations that will likely end up pointing to similar L2 addresses.

  • @pashikantiprabhakar3684
    @pashikantiprabhakar3684 Год назад +2

    Sir love your teaching methodology

  • @jaden85643
    @jaden85643 6 месяцев назад

    Excellent video got the entire concept down

  • @mateovizuete
    @mateovizuete Год назад +1

    Great Job!

  • @neptobrown3666
    @neptobrown3666 11 месяцев назад

    best videos thank you Jeremy

  • @avanox3100
    @avanox3100 Месяц назад

    Damn fantatsic video!!
    It's a pitty I did not discover your channel e biat earlyer 🙂
    Think you are one of the best one for ccna I found 🙂

  • @manikandanrajkumar6695
    @manikandanrajkumar6695 6 месяцев назад +4

    Hello everyone, so far the course is so good and understandable. if anyone has started preparing for the CCNA. Please let me know let's study together 😀🤝

  • @Omenemperor2
    @Omenemperor2 23 дня назад

    THanks for the video, is very infromative

  • @TheGuyCalledCarl
    @TheGuyCalledCarl 2 месяца назад

    Great explanation! I finally understand it 😃👍

  • @NetworkingwithHamza
    @NetworkingwithHamza 2 месяца назад

    Thank you so much. Amazing video

  • @MuhammednurJemal-eo4ti
    @MuhammednurJemal-eo4ti 8 месяцев назад

    its really amazing video thank you ,

  • @fatheroffootball1858
    @fatheroffootball1858 Год назад +2

    I need this topic so thanks

  • @retrorakshit1092
    @retrorakshit1092 Год назад +1

    I am from India excellent video very helpful sir

  • @tranquocchienchinh5451
    @tranquocchienchinh5451 9 месяцев назад

    thank you so much ❤

  • @juanmartinayonacarrera2190
    @juanmartinayonacarrera2190 Год назад

    Thank you for videos.

  • @ljubisarajkovic7519
    @ljubisarajkovic7519 5 месяцев назад

    Thank youuuu !!!

  • @paulroberts8542
    @paulroberts8542 Год назад +3

    Great videos and timely for me because I've been looking at this topic recently. I don't agree with your statement that neither the next-hop or exit-interface option is better in the ip route command. In an Ethernet LAN (as opposed to a serial point to point), Proxy ARP is less efficient for the forwarding router. Because the forwarding router sees all destinations matched by the routing entry as local, it will use ARP to find the MAC addresses - the peer router (next hop) replies to the ARPs with its own MAC on behalf of the real destination IP addresses. This means that the forwarding router will potentially have a large ARP cache containing entries for all possible destinations. This may be inefficient and impact performance. If, instead, the next-hop option is used, the forwarding router need only know the MAC address of the next router.

  • @mostaphasaid7250
    @mostaphasaid7250 Год назад

    thank you alot,/
    you are awesome

  • @amazingfood1186
    @amazingfood1186 7 месяцев назад

    This was super hard, I will continue with the course and return later to routing

  • @Guck_Forex
    @Guck_Forex Год назад +1

    Thanks alot

  • @shubhamtiwari3569
    @shubhamtiwari3569 2 месяца назад

    # completed Day-11 Successfully was a nice lecture got to know about Static Route and how to Configure Static Route and Default Route

  • @bobdavislumbro4047
    @bobdavislumbro4047 Год назад +1

    Yoooo Jeremy ! Quick question, does a router or switch have a “ main MAC address “ besides the ones on all of its interfaces ?

  • @c0dych1ef
    @c0dych1ef 10 месяцев назад

    🥴🤯 gotta rewatch this one a few times at a slower speed

  • @pace1134
    @pace1134 Год назад +2

    Thanks!

    • @JeremysITLab
      @JeremysITLab  2 месяца назад

      Thanks so much for the tip! Sorry for the l very late reply, I just noticed this comment now. I appreciate your support :)

  • @aruizsilva
    @aruizsilva 11 дней назад

    thanks!!

  • @socratesmustafa6788
    @socratesmustafa6788 6 месяцев назад

    Hey Jeremy, it's an amazing video and you make the topics very easy to understand. Thank you very much for your time and your work.
    I just have one question about configuring the second rout on R2 24:45 (exit interface with the next hop). I entered the command exactly like you did, but it says "% Invalid input detected at '^' marker." and then it points the ^ marker to the beginning of the ip address of the next hop 192.168.24.4
    Do you know why is it showing this?
    In Packet Tracer I'm using the Cisco router 2911

  • @Scorpisces1911
    @Scorpisces1911 5 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you so much

    • @JeremysITLab
      @JeremysITLab  2 месяца назад

      Thanks so much for the tip! Sorry for the late reply, just noticed this. I appreciate your support :)

  • @Botanisse
    @Botanisse Год назад

    Which trunking protocol(802.1q or ISL) does RAPID PVST+ support?
    As you mentioned pvst+ supports dot1q. Is rapid pvst+ similar like pvst+.
    Please I need your answer 🙏

  • @anythinggh1522
    @anythinggh1522 Месяц назад

    I will have to watch this again...!!!! creating the routes in my head is giving me issues.(Filling the Chart).

  • @craigmack012
    @craigmack012 Год назад

    @Jeremy's IT Lab I believe the wording for configuration command of a static route should be "ip route network-address netmask next-hop" ip-address is not explanatory of what is needed in the command.

  • @janis_14
    @janis_14 9 месяцев назад +1

    I have a question regarding the last quiz question:
    Wouldn't it also be possible to add one route via R1/4?
    I.e. 192.168.0.0/19 192.168.13.0?
    Sure that wouldn't be the shortest route to 192.168.24.0/24 but it still would give reachability without bricking something else, wouldn't it? And when the question is, how many routes do i need, I want to get as low as possible, don't I?
    When thinking about it, when we assume that the other routers have a full routing table, we would be able to get it done in one route right? I.e. delegate it to R1 for example.

  • @user-jp9ro1jc8i
    @user-jp9ro1jc8i 3 месяца назад

    better than most paid lessons

  • @nicolatomassini8965
    @nicolatomassini8965 5 месяцев назад

    in which video do you explain floating static routes?

  • @thetiagomatos
    @thetiagomatos Год назад

    Hey Jeremy, so far I have been reviewing every single flashcard everyday at night, I've wrote over 40 a4 pages. usually I get 2 to 3 cards wrong by deck. and complete the labs as you lecture them. If I keep this up do you think it is enough? Basically I'm following this course very VERY strictly .
    Thank you so much for doing this for free, you're the best!

    • @babarhyatt7578
      @babarhyatt7578 10 месяцев назад

      of course you going to rise and shine. Prayers needed for me also to get thru with flying colors. Regards

  • @IzzenArt
    @IzzenArt Год назад

    Have yet to take the real CCNA, but the Cisco practice test DID have a question regarding proxy ARP.

    • @JeremysITLab
      @JeremysITLab  Год назад +2

      Keep in mind the people who make those practice exams don't have anything to do with the people at Cisco who make the CCNA. They're a separate company licensing the Cisco name.

    • @IzzenArt
      @IzzenArt Год назад

      @@JeremysITLab Oh, very good to know. Thanks!

  • @Sam-dg1gm
    @Sam-dg1gm 11 месяцев назад +1

    Hey Jermy I am the student who subscribed your channel when you have only 500 subscribers because I believe in your knowledge

  • @danialkamran7280
    @danialkamran7280 Год назад +1

    Hey Jeremey, we might cover it soon, but what does modem mean then? Is it just another name for a router? I am a bit confused on router vs modem.

    • @meditate1181
      @meditate1181 4 месяца назад

      Modem connects a network to the telephone network (dsl) or to tv cable (coaxial), and then the connection is to a router.
      Router connects LANs and Wlans to internet network using utp, cat6, w

  • @user-rd2ub5jh9f
    @user-rd2ub5jh9f День назад

    Dear Mr. Jeremy
    how do you make this table routing table I don't understand

  • @knives4260
    @knives4260 8 месяцев назад

    I have one question if anyone can help with. In the last lesson it was stated that a router will drop a packet that none of its routes match the destination IP address. Is this only true if there is no default of 0.0.0.0? Also great video series, just caught on this one question. Thanks!

    • @twotoned2774
      @twotoned2774 7 месяцев назад

      That is correct. If there is a default route set, it will forward it out the default route. If none is set, the router will drop it.

  • @jingyang4244
    @jingyang4244 Год назад

    Hi Jeremy, I’m wondering where can I get the flash cards? I didn’t see the link in description

  • @matsu1994
    @matsu1994 Год назад

    Is it better practice to specify both the next hop and the interface when declaring static routes? Or why would I not just specify the next hop? What I mean is, is there any point in going through the extra trouble?

    • @weniweedeewiki.6237
      @weniweedeewiki.6237 Год назад

      I think it the only difference is that when you specify the interface it makes it a directly connected route when it actually isnt .......still learning myself.....

  • @fousse7
    @fousse7 9 месяцев назад

    I don't get why at 24:30, the packet is being sent to R4 g0/1 instead of g0/0. Can someone please clarify? Thanks.

    • @JeremysITLab
      @JeremysITLab  9 месяцев назад

      It’s being sent out of R2 g0/1 to R4 g0/0.

  • @syedyousafbukhari2213
    @syedyousafbukhari2213 Год назад

    One question, so you said let's consider they know the MAC address for the whole neighbouring networking, but what about the IP address.. i mean we did configure them but do routers know it? do they find out by ARP requests too?
    Great video tho, very simplified!

    • @JeremysITLab
      @JeremysITLab  Год назад

      We state the next-hop IP address in the static route configuration command: "ip route "

  • @muratemredemircioglu2897
    @muratemredemircioglu2897 18 дней назад

    Hi Jeremy! You say that all routers dont need routes to all networks in the path to the destination but when I dont assign static routes in the path to the destination, I cant ping the PC in the destination. Anyone can help me about this? Thank you.

  • @nicolatomassini8965
    @nicolatomassini8965 5 месяцев назад

    Hi Jeremy. why in the example of router 3 did you configure 2 static routes while in quiz 5 there would be 4? Is the reason why you choose the PC1-PC4 unique ping path to be just R1-R3-R4? Could you write in response to this comment the commands of the 4 static routes to add please? Thanks

    • @meditate1181
      @meditate1181 4 месяца назад

      Each router is connected to a separate network.

  • @codebrown2349
    @codebrown2349 Год назад

    why does the static ip command change from 192.168.4.0 to 192.168.1.0 in the ip address portion of the static ip command on r4? the next hop is still in line with the other configurations but im trying to figure out why it goes from ip route 192.168.4.0 to ip route 192.168.1.0 once we get to R4. Thanks!

    • @codebrown2349
      @codebrown2349 Год назад

      I woke up and realized this is for 2 way reachability. if im wrong someone correct me lol

  • @vlad_mix_887
    @vlad_mix_887 10 месяцев назад

    Done 20

  • @kavishalakmal3273
    @kavishalakmal3273 Год назад +2

    200 - 301 syllabus changed ?

  • @yasserbouhha2265
    @yasserbouhha2265 10 месяцев назад

    WAAA 3LA JAHD 3ANDEK

  • @jonathanfabros1310
    @jonathanfabros1310 2 месяца назад +1

    I'm confused rn. Default gateway is the router right ? If a packet is sent outside the network, the packet will be transmitted to the "default gateway" and then to the next-hop (if static route is configured). Then how is it that default gateway and default route the same? When the definition of default route, is the route where the packet is sent if the router has no matching routes in its table anymore ? Can someone pls enlighten me.

    • @stephenhu118
      @stephenhu118 Месяц назад

      default gateway is a concept on a PC while default route is a route entry in router's routing table.

  • @MikeyJoJo6385
    @MikeyJoJo6385 Год назад

    👑

  • @konradwerner4134
    @konradwerner4134 Месяц назад

    question 2 😵‍💫

  • @danielwoodcock7016
    @danielwoodcock7016 2 месяца назад

    Can someone please tell me why my router doesn't show local routes in the routing table? Only connected routes when I first configure an ip. Everything functions fine, its just bugging me! I cant seem to find an answer from Google for once...

  • @saurabhsharma7050
    @saurabhsharma7050 9 месяцев назад

    ip route ip address netmask exit interface next hope
    I tried this command on next lab and it is invalid
    can you please help ?

  • @pawnshop_ghost
    @pawnshop_ghost 4 месяца назад

    I'm pretty confused by the routing diagram in this video. Are the IP addresses of R4 interfaces supposed to be 192.168.4.X or 192.168.34.X? The ".4" is the last octet for the interface IPs, right? So then that means the interfaces are on the .34 network? Then what does the 192.168.4 network belong to? Because of the placement of the IP addresses in the diagram, I really cannot tell what entity they belong to.

    • @pawnshop_ghost
      @pawnshop_ghost 4 месяца назад

      Okay I think I understand it now, it's just sorta weird looking at it because the whole thing is crammed together. But the .4/24 network is a separate network connected to R4 that PC4 is on, but is not necessarily the same as the R4 IP addresses. Is that correct?

    • @pawnshop_ghost
      @pawnshop_ghost 4 месяца назад

      Alright I'm confused again, so do the routes themselves have their own network addresses? So G0/0 on R3 has an IP address of 192.168.13.3, correct? I was under the impression that R3 would be the only devices with a .13 network address, but I guess R1 has a .13 network address too on G0/0. Is that right?

    • @pawnshop_ghost
      @pawnshop_ghost 4 месяца назад

      Okay I THINK I understand it now, so the connected interfaces share the same network address, so in theory each different interface on a router would have a different network address. I think. I don't know how this would look in larger networks, but this is what I've pieced together. Thank you everyone for following the ongoing saga of me slipping further into madness

  • @Aaron14LifeZZZ
    @Aaron14LifeZZZ Месяц назад

    Im confused with the 2nd question on the quiz

  • @user-fg1tb6jw4i
    @user-fg1tb6jw4i 9 месяцев назад

    i think the default route 0.0.0.0/0= 1.2.3.4/0 Did someone try this?

  • @oliverbirgin4604
    @oliverbirgin4604 Год назад

    wooooo

  • @dyinirtan01
    @dyinirtan01 2 месяца назад

    Quiz 5's a bit tricky. Took me 5minutes to fully understand 😂

  • @darvinist87
    @darvinist87 7 месяцев назад

    Great video to quickly get to sleep

  • @saiduville4563
    @saiduville4563 8 месяцев назад

    Hi

  • @user-gv5wd2ii7l
    @user-gv5wd2ii7l 3 месяца назад

    I tried to use the command "ip route ip-address netmask exit-interface next-hop" in Packet Tracer and it would not let me use it, the other two commands worked though.

  • @tato2493528
    @tato2493528 8 месяцев назад

    dont understand question 2..lol

  • @cbot375
    @cbot375 13 дней назад +1

    I find it funny on how the video course progresses (gets more heavy on info) the less likes and comments there are, are people dropping out after 1 week? lol, c'mon.

  • @SchrodingersPuss
    @SchrodingersPuss Год назад

    Quiz Question 2. If default route is via 203.0.113.2, does that assume the other end of the connection (next hop)from G0/2 (.1) is always going to be .2 ? Or couldn't the next hop address be 203.0.113.5 ?

    • @tokoiaoben3842
      @tokoiaoben3842 Год назад

      If it is a /30 the only possible addresses are 203.0.113.0,203.0.113.1,203.0.113.2,203.0.113.3. Remember 203.0.113.0 is for the network and 203.0.113.3 for the broadcast.So valid the host addresses are 203.0.113.1 and 203.0.113.2.