What should you configure to ensure that traffic exits the network by way of Router 1 toward ISP 1?
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Company A wants to control how BGP traffic reaches the Internet. What should you configure to ensure that traffic exits the network by way of Router 1 toward ISP 1?
if you view the AS-path attribute of this route on a router in AS 9021, what will it be?
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In the exhibit, the route 66.129.237.5 belongs to a Web server within AS 344.
ifyou view the AS-path attribute of this route on a router in AS 9021, what will it be?
What will the BGP next-hop attribute of this route be when examined on Router 1?
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Router 2 is peered using EBGP to Router 3’s physical interface. A route is announced from Router 3 to Router 2. Router 2 then announces this route to Router 1 using IBGP. No routing policies are configured on any of the three routers. What will the BGP next-hop attribute of this route be when examined on Router 1?
which two attributes will be changed by default?
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In the exhibit, the 172.32.1.0/24 prefix is being sent from Router A to Router B through BGP. When the BGP announcement for 172.23.1.0/24 is sent from Router B and received by Router C, which two attributes will be changed by default? (Choose two.)
What is causing the problem?
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In the configuration shown in the exhibit, you want to form an EBGP peering relationship to the loopback address of a router administered by your ISP, but the session will not establish. What is causing the problem?
Which BGP attribute should you use to influence inbound traffic to use the primary link t hat is sourced from
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The exhibit shows a BGP multihomed network connecting to ISP A and ISP B. The secondary link is to be used only in a failover scenario in which the primary link is not usable. Which BGP attribute should you use to influence inbound traffic to use the primary link t hat is sourced from ISP C?
which IS-IS area does this router belong?
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Refer to the router configuration shown in the exhibit. To which IS-IS area does this router belong?
which IS-IS level(s) does this router belong?
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Refer to the router configuration shown in the exhibit. To which IS-IS level(s) does this router
belong?
Which routers are now the DR and BDR?
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Five routers (R1, R2, R3, R4, and R5) are attached to a single Ethernet LAN and configured with addresses in the same subnet. R1 is chosen as the designated router (DR) and R2 is chosen as the backup designated router (BDR). You add R6 and configure it as shown in the exhibit. Which routers are now the DR and BDR?
which router will become the backup designated router (BDR)?
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In the exhibit, six routers (R1, R2, R3, R4, R5, and R6) are attached to a single Ethernet LAN and configured with addresses in the same subnet. All devices boot at the same time. Which router will become the designated router (DR), and which router will become the backup designated router (BDR)?