IT Questions and Answers :)

Sunday, January 15, 2023

Common questions and answers asked to L1 VMware/Network Engineer & Administrator or Admin

Common questions and answers asked to L1 VMware/Network Engineer & Administrator or Admin

What are the layers of the OSI reference model and What is its job?

What are the layers of the OSI reference model and What is its job?

There are 7 OSI layers: 

1) Physical Layer, 

2) Data Link Layer, 

3) Network Layer, 

4) TransportLayer, 

5) Session Layer, 

6) Presentation Layer, and 

7) Application Layer.


The Network layer is responsible for data routing, packet switching, and control of network

congestion. Routers operate under this layer.


What are routers? 

Routers can connect two or more network segments. These are intelligent network devices that store information in their routing tables, such as paths, hops, and bottlenecks. With this info, they can determine the best path for data transfer. Routers operate at the OSI Network Layer.


What is a VPN? 

VPN means Virtual Private Network, a technology that allows a secure tunnel to be created across a network such as the Internet. For example, VPNs allow you to establish a secure dial-up connection to a remote server.


Briefly describe NAT

NAT is Network Address Translation. This is a protocol that provides a way for multiple computers on a common network to share a single connection to the Internet. 


What are proxy servers, and how do they protect computer networks? 

Proxy servers primarily prevent external users who are identifying the IP addresses of an internal network. Without knowledge of the correct IP address, even the physical location of the network cannot be identified. Proxy servers can make a network virtually invisible to external users.


How can you identify the IP class of a given IP address? 

By looking at the first octet of any given IP address, you can identify whether it’s Class A, B, or C. If the first octet begins with a 0 bit, that address is Class A. If it begins with bits 10 then that address is a Class B address. If it begins with 110, then it’s a Class C network.


What is the disadvantage of a star topology? 

One major disadvantage of star topology is that once the central Hub or switch gets damaged, the entire network becomes unusable.


What is the main job of the ARP? 

The main task of the ARP or Address Resolution Protocol is to map a known IP address to a MAC layer address.


What protocol can be applied when you want to transfer files between different platforms, such as UNIX systems and Windows servers? 

Use FTP (File Transfer Protocol) for file transfers between such different servers. This is possible because FTP is platform-independent


What is ICMP? 

ICMP is an Internet Control Message Protocol. It provides messaging and communication for protocols within the TCP/IP stack. This is also the protocol that manages error messages that are used by network tools such as PING


What is SMTP? 

SMTP is short for Simple Mail Transfer Protocol. This protocol deals with all internal mail and provides the necessary mail delivery services on the TCP/IP protocol stack.


What is one basic requirement for establishing VLANs? 

A VLAN is required because at the switch level. There is only one broadcast domain. It means whenever a new user is connected to switch. This information is spread throughout the network. VLAN on switch helps to create a separate broadcast domain at the switch level. It is used for security purposes.


What are the different types of VPN?

 Access VPN: Access VPN is used to provide connectivity to remote mobile users and telecommuters. It serves as an alternative to dial-up connections or ISDN (Integrated Services Digital Network) connections. It is a low-cost solution and provides a wide range of connectivity. 

Site-to-Site VPN: A Site-to-Site or Router-to-Router VPN is commonly used in large companies having branches in different locations to connect the network of one office to another in different locations. There are 2 sub-categories as mentioned below:  

Intranet VPN: Intranet VPN is useful for connecting remote offices in different geographical locations using shared infrastructure (internet connectivity and servers) with the same accessibility policies as a private WAN (wide area network). 

Extranet VPN: Extranet VPN uses shared infrastructure over an intranet, suppliers, customers, partners, and other entities and connects them using dedicated connections.


Topology: All the nodes are connected using the central link known as the bus. It is useful to connect a smaller number of devices. If the main cable gets damaged, it will damage the whole network.

Star Topology: All the nodes are connected to one single node known as the central node. It is more robust. If the central node fails the complete network is damaged. Easy to troubleshoot. Mainly used in home and office networks.

Ring Topology: Each node is connected to exactly two nodes forming a ring structure. If one of the nodes are damaged, it will damage the whole network. It is used very rarely as it is expensive and hard to install and manage.

Mesh Topology: Each node is connected to one or many nodes. It is robust as failure in one link only disconnects that node. It is rarely used and installation and management are difficult.

Tree Topology: A combination of star and bus topology also know as an extended bus topology. All the smaller star networks are connected to a single bus. If the main bus fails, the whole network is damaged.

Hybrid: It is a combination of different topologies to form a new topology. It helps to ignore the drawback of a particular topology and helps to pick the strengths from other.


What are Unicasting, Anycasting, Multicasting and Broadcasting?

Unicasting: If the message is sent to a single node from the source then it is known as unicasting. This is commonly used in networks to establish a new connection.

Anycasting: If the message is sent to any of the nodes from the source then it is known as anycasting. It is mainly used to get the content from any of the servers in the Content Delivery System. 

Multicasting: If the message is sent to a subset of nodes from the source then it is known as multicasting. Used to send the same data to multiple receivers.

Broadcasting: If the message is sent to all the nodes in a network from a source then it is known as broadcasting. DHCP and ARP in the local network use broadcasting.


What happens when you enter google.com in the web browser?

If not, the browser checks if the IP of the URL is present in the cache (browser and OS) if not then request the OS to do a DNS lookup using UDP to get the corresponding IP address of the URL from the DNS server to establish a new TCP connection.

A new TCP connection is set between the browser and the server using three-way handshaking.

An HTTP request is sent to the server using the TCP connection.

The web servers running on the Servers handle the incoming HTTP request and send the HTTP response.

The browser process the HTTP response sent by the server and may close the TCP connection or reuse the same for future requests.

If the response data is cacheable then browsers cache the same. • Browser decodes the response and renders the conten


What is SNMP architecture? 

SNMP has a simple architecture based on a client-server model.

The servers, called managers, collect and process information about devices on the network.

The clients, called agents, are any type of device or device component connected to the network. They can include not just computers, but also network switches, phones, printers, and so on.


What are the different memories used in a CISCO router?

NVRAM: stores the startup configuration file.

DRAM: stores the configuration file that is being executed.

ROM It is the bootstrap software that runs and maintains instructions for POST diagnostics.

Flash Memory: stores the Cisco IOS.


Differentiate User Mode from Privileged Mode 

User Mode is used for regular task when using a CISCO router, such as to view system information, connecting to remote devices, and checking the status of the router. On the other hand, privileged mode includes all options that are available for User Mode, plus more. You can use this mode in order to make configurations on the router, including making tests and debugging.


Differentiate full-duplex from half-duplex.

 In full-duplex, both the transmitting device and the receiving device can communicate simultaneously, that is, both can be transmitting and receiving at the same time. In the case of half-duplex, a device cannot receive while it is transmitting, and vice versa.


In configuring a router, what command must be used if you want to delete the configuration data that is stored in the NVRAM? 

erase startup-config


What Is The Location Of The Active Directory Database? 

C:windows\Ntds\Ntds.dit.


Name the default protocol used in directory services? 

LDAP (Lightweight Directory Access Protocol).


Explain Emulation Drivers? 

The emulation drivers are mainly devices that imitate another program. In simple terms, emulation drivers are a trick to fool the device that it is some other sort of a device.


What Are Synthetic Drivers? 

Synthetic drives are different and better than the emulation ones in their functions. They don’t imitate another program but, create another hardware complex device on a virtual platform.


What Is Desktop Virtualization? 


Desktop virtualization is a logical procedure to isolate and extract the OS or system from the client that is ready to access it. There are many types of desktop virtualizations some of which include virtual machines while some do not

What Is Dac? 

Microsoft Dynamic Access Control or DAC is a data governance tool in Windows Server 2012 that allows administrators control access settings. It uses centralized policies to permit administrators to review who has access to individual files. Files can be classified manually or automatically.

Define SYSVOL? 

The SysVOL file keeps the server’s copy of the domain’s public files. The fillings such as users, group policy.

What is Kerberos? 

Kerberos is a verification protocol for the network. It is built to present secure verification for client applications by using secret-key cryptography.

What do you mean by organizational units? 

The Organizational Unit is a serious design factor impacting policy, security, competence and the charge of administration. Organizational Units are a kind of LDAP (X.500) pot. It can be a reflection of as a sub-domain element with comparable properties to domains.

What do you mean by Active Directory Recycle Bin? 

Active Directory Recycle bin is a characteristic of Windows Server 2008 AD. It helps to re-establish by chance deleted Active Directory objects without using a backed-up AD database, rebooting area controller.

Do we use clustering in Active Directory? …. Why? 

No one installs Active Directory in a bunch. There is no need for clustering a field controller. Active Directory provides total joblessness with two or more servers.

What is child DC?

Child DC is a sub-area controller under the root domain controller which share a namespace.

Tell me the port no of LDAP?

 The port no of LDAP is 389

If I try to look schema, how can I do that?

 c:\windows\system32>regsvr32 schmmgmt.dll
Open mmc --> add snapin --> add Active directory schema
name it as schema.msc Open administrative tool --> schema.msc

Define Native Mode? 


When all domain controllers in a given area are consecutively Windows 2000 Server, this way permits organizations to take the lead of new Active Directory features such as worldwide groups, inter-domain group membership and nested group membership.

What is VMware and what are their benefits? 

VMware provides different applications and software for virtualization. VMware products are categorized into two levels, desktop applications, and Server applications. It is useful for: • Running multiple operating systems and applications on a single computer • Consolidate hardware to get vastly higher productivity from fewer servers • Save more of total cost spend on IT • It simplifies IT management and speeds up the deployment of new applications

Explain what is hypervisor 


A hypervisor is a program that enables multiple operating systems to share a single hardware host. Each operating system has the host’s processor, memory and other resources all to itself. The hypervisor controls the resources and host processor, allocating what is required for each operating system in turn and make sure that the guest operating system cannot disrupt each other.

Explain VMware DRS? 

VMware DRS stands for Distributed Resource Scheduler; it dynamically balances resources across various host under a cluster or resource pool. It enables users to determine the rules and
policies which decide how virtual machines deploy resources, and these resources should be prioritized to multiple virtual machines

What are the storage and availability in vCloud Suite? 

Storage DRS:It place and load balance virtual machines based on storage capacity and I/O latency
Storage vMotion:It employs proactive, non-disruptive storage migration to reduce virtual machine storage I/O bottlenecks and free up valuable storage capacity 
Application HA:It gains high availability that is bound to specific applications
Data Protection: Based on EMC avamar, it deploys a back-up and recovery tool

What is the difference between VMware HA and Vmware FT? 


VMware FT is enabled per VM basis while VMware is enabled per cluster 

In the case of ESX host failure, virtual machines are the failed host and are re-started and powered-on the other active hosts in HA cluster. But FT-enabled virtual machines; there is no downtime. In the case of a host failure, the secondary VM will be activated, and it becomes primary and continue to run from the exact point where the primary VM is failed or left off.

What is Fault Tolerant Logging? 

The communication between two ESXI host is known as Fault logging when FT is configured between them.

Explain vSS 

vSS stands for Virtual Standard Switch is responsible for communication of VMs hosted on a single physical host. It automatically detects a VM which wants to communicate with other VM on the same physical server

What are pluggable devices which can be added while Virtual Machine is running? 

You can add HDDs and NIC while Virtual Machine is running.

What is Cold and Hot Migration? 

When you migrate powered off or suspended, it is known as cold migration. When you migrate your running power on virtual machines, it is known as hot migration.

Explain the importance of snapshot in VMWare

A VMWare snapshot is a copy of a virtual machine disk file which is used to restore a VM to a specific point in time when the system fails, or system error occurs.

Explain Cluster in VMware 

Cluster in VMware is a logical grouping of multi ESXi hosts. It allows you to add or delete the host from the cluster. It also provides a feature like HA, DRS, on the cluster.

Disadvantages of the VMware virtualization platform

It requires a considerable investment to buy the resources
High-end server needs which increase the cost. 
Different technologies are required for its implementation

Can we do vMotion between two data centers? 

Yes, we can do vMotion between two datacenters. However, for this VM should be powered off.

What is RDM? 

RDM is a sort form of Raw Device Mapping. It is a file stored in VMFS volume which acts as a proxy for a raw physical device. It allows you to store virtual machine data directly on LUN.

What is NFS? 

NFS is a Network file system. It is a file sharing protocol which ESXI host used to communicate with the NAS device. It is a specialized store device which connects to a network.

What is VMKernel? 

Why is it important? The VMkernel is the interface between virtual machines (VMs) and the physical hardware of the system. The responsibility of VMkernel is to scheduling CPUs, allocating memory and providing other hardware abstraction with other operating system (OS) services.

How can I differentiate between virtual machine port groups and VMkernel ports? 

The big difference between a Virtual Machine port group and a VMkernel port group is the sort of traffic it’s passing. As you’ll see, a VMkernel port is passing traffic specific to VMware vSphere. A virtual machine port group is simply passing your garden variety virtual machine traffic.

How does vMotion work in the background? 

The Virtual Machine Memory state is copied over the Vmotion Network from the source Host to the Target Host. users still access the virtual machine and potentially update pages in memory. A list of modified pages in memory is kept during a memory Bitmap on the source Host.

What happens if VMotion fails? 

VMotion will fail if the target host does not have enough memory to satisfy the reservation of the virtual machine. If you want to fix this, migrate the virtual machine to another ESXi host that can provide the guaranteed memory for the VM or reduce the memory reservation of the virtual machine.

What’s iSCSI in VMware? 

iSCSI may be a protocol which uses the TCP to move SCSI commands and also enables the utilization of the prevailing TCP/IP networking infrastructure as a cargo area Network.

What’s the difference between FC and FCoE? 

FCOE maps Fiber Channel over full duplex Ethernet networks based on IEEE 802.3 standard. and therefore the other hand, Fiber Channel or FC may be a serial data transfer protocol and standard for high-speed enterprise-grade storage networking. It accelerates to 128 Gbps and delivers storage data over fast optical networks.

What’s the utilization of snapshots in VMware? 

The VMware snapshot is used to preserve the state and data of the Virtual machine at the present point in time so once you are done testing, you’ll quickly revert the VM back to a desired state. In VMware, VMware snapshots are easy and quick thanks to saving the state of a virtual machine before you test a software update, patch or other change.

What’s the complete sort of LUN? 

LUN stands for Logical Unit Number.

What’s the difference between RDM and VMDK? 

RDM is additionally referred to as a pass-through disk, and may be a mapping file that acts as a proxy for a physical device like a LUN. On the opposite side VMDK may be a file that appears as a tough drive to the guest OS . Fundamentally it’s a virtual disk drive.

What’s the difference between SAN and vSAN? 

SAN leverages storage protocols like FCP and iSCSI while vSAN only works with ESXi hosts. Within the case of SAN, storage administrators are required to pre-allocate storage on different systems although vSAN automatically converts local storage resources into one storage pool.

What’s a vSphere client?

The vSphere Client is an application software that permits management of a vSphere installation. The vSphere Client provides an administrator with access to the key functions of vSphere without the necessity to access a vSphere server directly.

What’s the max number of virtual machines per host? 

Maximum number of virtual machines per host is 100

What are the 2 reasons why a virtual machine might fail to power on? 

The virtual machine is running on an ESXi host which has an expired license. 
The virtual machine is running on a data-store which has insufficient disc space for the .vswp file.

What’s the utilization of vCenter server? 

vCenter is employed to manage multiple ESXi hosts, virtual machines and every one dependent component from one centralized location.

What are the services in vCenter server? 

The vCenter Server services are vCenter Server, vSphere Web Client, Inventory Service, vSphere Auto Deploy, vSphere ESXi Dump Collector, VMware vSphere Syslog Collector on Windows and VMware Sphere Syslog Service for the vCenter Server Appliance.
Share:

Wednesday, March 18, 2020

Which of the following is a routing protocol?

Which of the following is a routing protocol?

  • NTP
  • VLAN
  • EIGRP
  • NTLMv2 

Which of the following is a routing protocol?

EXPLANATION




Enhanced Interior Gateway Routing Protocol (EIGRP) is an interior gateway protocol suited for many different topologies and media.
In a well designed network, EIGRP scales well and provides extremely quick convergence times with minimal network traffic.

SOURCE

https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/support/docs/ip/enhanced-interior-gateway-routing-protocol-eigrp/16406-eigrp-toc.html
Share:

Thursday, October 3, 2019

Which of the following terms is used specifically to identify the entity created when encapsulating data inside data link layer headers and trailers?

Which of the following terms is used specifically to identify the entity created when encapsulating data inside data link layer headers and trailers?

  • Frame
  • Hitching
  • Segment
  • Packet 

 
Which of the following terms is used specifically to identify the entity created when encapsulating data inside data link layer headers and trailers?

EXPLANATION

Encapsulation of data occurs through each layer of the TCP/IP Networking model.
Each layer adds a header to the data it receives from the layer above it. At the Transport Layer, the encapsulated data is called a Segment. At the Network Layer, the encapsulated data is called a Packet. At the Data Link Layer, the encapsulated data is called a Frame.

SOURCE

https://www.ccnahub.com/ip-fundamentals/understanding-data-link-layer-encapsulation/
Share:

Monday, September 23, 2019

On which layer of the OSI model are packets formed?

On which layer of the OSI model are packets formed?

  • 2
  • 4
  • 1
  • 3

On which layer of the OSI model are packets formed?

EXPLANATION

Packets exist on the third, or Network, layer of the OSI model. The following are the counterparts for packets on the other layers: Layer 1 (Physical): bits; Layer 2 (Data Link): frames; Layer 4 (Transport): segments.


SOURCE

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OSI_model#Description_of_OSI_layers
 
Share:

Wednesday, July 10, 2019

Which of the following devices can operate in the Network and Data Link layers?

Which of the following devices can operate in the Network and Data Link layers?

  • Bridge
  • Router
  • NIC
  • Brouter (Bridge Router) 


EXPLANATION

Brouter combines the function of a router as well as a bridge. Router operates in the network layer and bridge operates in the data link layer.

http://techterms.com/definition/brouter

SOURCE

http://techterms.com/definition/brouter
Share:

Tuesday, May 14, 2019

When data traveling across a network fails to reach its destination, this is known as which of the following:

When data traveling across a network fails to reach its destination, this is known as which of the following:

  • Packet loss
  • Missed connections
  • Delayed package
  • Missed delivery 

When data traveling across a network fails to reach its destination, this is known as which of the following:

EXPLANATION

Packet loss is typically caused by network congestion and is measured as a percentage of packets lost with respect to packets sent.

The other three are not really network related.

See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Packet_loss for more details on packet lossed.

Share:

Thursday, April 11, 2019

The name given to simultaneous data transfer to targeted network connected devices, this method generally reduces load on the clients

The name given to simultaneous data transfer to targeted network connected devices, this method generally reduces load on the clients

  • Unicast
  • Multicast
  • Broadcast
  • Scattercast 

 
The name given to simultaneous data transfer to targeted network connected devices, this method generally reduces load on the clients

EXPLANATION


Unicast: traffic, many streams of IP packets that move across networks flow from a single point, such as a website server, to a single endpoint such as a client PC. This is the most common form of information transference on networks.

Broadcast: Here, traffic streams from a single point to all possible endpoints within reach on the network, which is generally a LAN. This is the easiest technique to ensure traffic reaches to its destinations.
This mode is mainly utilized by television networks for video and audio distribution. Even if the television network is a cable television (CATV) system, the source signal reaches to all possible destinations, which is the key reason that some channels’ content is scrambled. Broadcasting is not practicable on the public Internet due to the massive amount of unnecessary data that would continually reach at each user’s device, the complications and impact of scrambling and related privacy issues.
Multicast: In this method traffic recline between the boundaries of unicast (one point to one destination) and broadcast (one point to all destinations). And multicast is a “one source to many destinations” way of traffic distribution, means that only the destinations that openly point to their requisite to accept the data from a specific source to receive the traffic stream.

SOURCE

https://www.esds.co.in/blog/difference-between-unicast-broadcast-and-multicast/#sthash.sqHC51wG.dpbs
Share:

Friday, March 29, 2019

What default port does SSH use?

What default port does SSH use?

  • Port 21
  • Port 80
  • Port 53
  • Port 22 

What default port does SSH use?

EXPLANATION


File Transfer Protocol
The File Transfer Protocol is a standard network protocol used for the transfer of computer files between a client and server on a computer network. FTP is on Port 21
Secure Shell
Secure Shell is a cryptographic network protocol for operating network services securely over an unsecured network. The best known example application is for remote login to computer systems by users.Secure Shell (SSH) uses TCP port 22.
Hypertext Transfer Protocol
The Hypertext Transfer Protocol is an application protocol for distributed, collaborative, and hypermedia information systems. HTTP is the foundation of data communication for the World Wide Web.Wikipedia Developed by:CERN HTTP is on Port 80
Domain Name System
The Domain Name System is a hierarchical decentralized naming system for computers, services, or other resources connected to the Internet or a private network. It associates various information with domain names assigned to each of the participating entities.Wikipedia DNS is on Port 53

SOURCE

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_TCP_and_UDP_port_numbers
Share:

Friday, March 22, 2019

You have two very fast servers and need to transfer a 10 Gigabyte file from one server to the other. You have a 10/100 switch to connect these servers. Which of the following transfer time estimates is the most accurate?

You have two very fast servers and need to transfer a 10 Gigabyte file from one server to the other. You have a 10/100 switch to connect these servers. Which of the following transfer time estimates is the most accurate?

  • 15 Seconds
  • 3 Minutes
  • 3 Seconds
  • 15 Minutes 


EXPLANATION

The maximum transfer rate of the switch is 100 megabit per second, not megabyte per second.  Odds are the switch will be the bottleneck between these two servers.  Many people mistakenly think a gigabit switch can transfer one gigabyte per second. 

A 100 Mbps switch will transfer approximately 12.5 Megabytes of information per second. 


1024 * 10 = 10240MB
10240 / 12.5 = 819.2 seconds
819.2 / 60 = 13.65333 minutes.
Round up, and it'll take about 15 minutes.

To do the math Another way
10 GB * 1024 MB/GB = 10240 MB
10240 MB * 8 Bits/Byte = 81920 megabits
81920 megabits / 100 megabits/Second = 819.2 seconds
819.2 seconds / 60 seconds/minute = 13.65 minutes
Share:

Tuesday, March 19, 2019

What default port does HTTP use?

What default port does HTTP use?

  • Port 22
  • Port 8080
  • Port 80
  • Port 21 

What default port does HTTP use?

EXPLANATION

Secure Shell Port 22 
Secure Shell is a cryptographic network protocol for operating network services securely over an unsecured network. The best known example application is for remote login to computer systems by users. 
 
Port 8080
PortTCP/UDP - EMC2 (Legato) Networker or Sun Solcitice Backup (Official) [7937-9936]
TCP - HTTP alternate (http_alt)—commonly used for Web proxy and caching server, or for running a Web server as a non-root user (Official)
TCP - Apache Tomcat (Unofficial)
UDP - FilePhile Master/Relay (Unofficial)
The primary protocol and port used by HTTP is TCP port 80. 
Port 80 is the port number assigned to commonly used internet communication protocol, Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP). It is the port from which a computer sends and receives Web client-based communication and messages from a Web server and is used to send and receive HTML pages or data
Port 21 File Transfer Protocol
The File Transfer Protocol is a standard network protocol used for the transfer of computer files between a client and server on a computer network.
Share:

Tuesday, March 12, 2019

When it comes to SNMP technology, what is the range of the "Counter32" parameter?

When it comes to SNMP technology, what is the range of the "Counter32" parameter?

  • 0 to 4294967295
  • 0 to 1099511627776
  • 32 to 272
  • -100 to 100 

 
When it comes to SNMP technology, what is the range of the "Counter32" parameter?

EXPLANATION

The Counter32 class allows all the functionality of unsigned integers but is recognized as a distinct SMI type, which specifies a value that represents a count.
The range is 0 to 4294967295

https://www.webnms.com/snmp/help/snmpapi/snmpv3/using_mibs_in_applns/countr32.html

Share:

Wednesday, March 6, 2019

Which of the following is an IPSLA option?

Which of the following is an IPSLA option?

  • Object-tracking
  • Reachability
  • Icmp-probing
  • IGMP-Snooping 

 
Which of the following is an IPSLA option?

EXPLANATION

The correct option is reachability.  This option permits the cisco device to track connectivity to an object, and change routes
accordingly based upon failure of the primary path.

SOURCE

http://www.firewall.cx/cisco-technical-knowledgebase/cisco-routers/813-cisco-router-ipsla-basic.html
Share:

Tuesday, November 20, 2018

Which of these is an advantage of Manchester Encoding?

Which of these is an advantage of Manchester Encoding?

  • It uses less bits than the original signal
  • It is named after an English City
  • Very easy to understand
  • The signal is self-synchronizing 

Which of these is an advantage of Manchester Encoding?

EXPLANATION

"In data transmission, Manchester encoding is a form of digital encoding in which data bits are represented by transitions from one logical state to the other. This is different from the more common method of encoding, in which a bit is represented by either a high state such as +5 volts or a low state such as 0 volts".
"The chief advantage of Manchester Encoding is the fact that the signal synchronizes itself." (See link for further reading).

http://searchnetworking.techtarget.com/definition/Manchester-encoding
Share:

Tuesday, November 6, 2018

What do you call the feature in packet-based data transmission protocols (Like TCP) that governs the amount of data (number of packets) the receiver is able to accept from the sender?

What do you call the feature in packet-based data transmission protocols (Like TCP) that governs the amount of data (number of packets) the receiver is able to accept from the sender?

  • Sequence Number
  • Jitter
  • CiDR
  • Sliding Window 

What do you call the feature in packet-based data transmission protocols (Like TCP) that governs the amount of data (number of packets) the receiver is able to accept from the sender?

EXPLANATION

The sliding window feature informs the sender how much data (packets) the receiver can accept.  Since networks are dynamic and are prone to congestion this number fluctuates depending on a number of variables.  Essentially if my PC is sending a file to the server it may send 10 packets out of 20,000 to start the transfer.  If the server was able to receive all of those packets it may request more.
 This will continue until the server either can't accept more because its buffer is full or some packets were missed because of congestion.  The sender will then retransmit missed packets and begin to scale down the window until the server and the receiver are in sync.  This back and forth continues to the end of the transfer.
https://www.google.com/search?num=50&q=sliding+window+protocol&oq=Sliding+Window+pr&gs_l...
Share:

Monday, October 22, 2018

If Windows cannot find an active DHCP server, which network does it use by default for the network port?

If Windows cannot find an active DHCP server, which network does it use by default for the network port?

  • 192.168.0.0/16
  • 169.254.0.0/16
  • 172.16.0.0/12
  • 127.0.0.1/32 

 
If Windows cannot find an active DHCP server, which network does it use by default for the network port?

EXPLANATION

The 169.254.0.0/16 network is used for Automatic Private IP Addressing, or APIPA. If a DHCP client attempts to get an address, but fails to find a DHCP server after the timeout and retries period it will randomly assume an address from this network. This is defined in RFC 3927.
192.168.0.0/16 and 172.16.0.0/12 are defined for private use networks (LANs). It has to be configured by manual installation as a static IP or by a DHCP Server.
127.0.0.1/32 is the loopback address of the PC. The loopback address can be used to test the performance of TCP/IP by pinging 127.0.0.1. Upon receiving a response, you can assume that the software associated with the protocol is fine.

Share:

Popular Posts