Q: 9
DRAG DROP Move each protocol from the list on the left to its correct example on the right.
Drag & Drop
Discussion
DHCP → Assign the reserved IP address 10.10.10.200 to a web server, DNS → Translate companypro.net to an IP address, ICMP → Perform a ping to check if server responds.
Pretty straightforward if you know how each protocol functions. DHCP is for dynamic IP assignment, DNS does name resolution, and ping uses ICMP for reachability tests. I think this matches real-world use and what I've seen on other practice sets, but open to comments if anyone spots a catch.
Pretty straightforward if you know how each protocol functions. DHCP is for dynamic IP assignment, DNS does name resolution, and ping uses ICMP for reachability tests. I think this matches real-world use and what I've seen on other practice sets, but open to comments if anyone spots a catch.
DHCP → Assign reserved IP, DNS → Translate companypro.net, ICMP → Ping server. The main trap is folks sometimes confuse DHCP with DNS for address stuff, but pretty sure this is how it lines up. If you think differently let me know.
DHCP to assign reserved IP, DNS for domain lookup, ICMP for ping-labs or Cisco guides cover these basics.
DHCP to reserved IP, DNS to translate companypro.net, ICMP to ping server. Pretty standard mapping for these protocols.
DHCP → Assign reserved IP, DNS → Translate companypro.net, ICMP → Ping server. Saw the same in practice sets.
DHCP → Assign the reserved IP address, DNS → Translate companypro.net, ICMP → Ping server for response. These are standard protocol uses in any networking basics. Pretty sure this is what Cisco wants but open to other interpretations.
Had something like this in a mock. The right order should be: DNS matches with "translate companypro.net", DHCP goes to "assign the reserved IP", and ICMP lines up with "ping the server". Pretty sure that's how Cisco wants it for protocol-to-use type questions, but correct me if you see it differently.
DNS -> Assign the reserved IP address, DHCP -> Translate companypro.net, ICMP -> Ping the server. I mixed up DNS and DHCP here since I thought DNS could handle addressing, but maybe that's not right. Did anyone else think so?
DNS to assign reserved IP, DHCP to translate companypro.net, ICMP to ping server
DHCP → Assign reserved IP, DNS → Translate companypro.net, ICMP → Ping server. Not 100% sure but this seems right.
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