Chapter 21 - OSPF Network Types and Neighbors Flashcards

1
Q

What are the three different OSPF network types?

A
  • Point to Point - Enabled on PPP and HDLC interfaces by default.
  • Broadcast (DR and BDR selection) - Enabled by default on Ethernet and FDDI (Fibre Distributed Data Interfaces) interfaces.
  • Non Broadcast - Enabled on Frame Relay and X.25 interfaces by default.
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2
Q

True or False. All OSPF Network Types use a DR and a BDR.

A

False. Only broadcast and non broadcast uses a DR and BDR.

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3
Q

What is the default OSPF network type used on an OSPF enabled Ethernet interface?

A

Broadcast.

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4
Q

When using the ‘show ip ospf interface brief’ command, what does the ‘nbrs F/C’ collumn mean?

A

This collumn lists two numbers.
- The first number lists the total number of Fully Adjacent (neighbors in a Full state with the local router) neighbors discovered out of a specified interface.
- The second number lists the total number of neighbors discovered out of a specified interface. This will include DROthers.

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5
Q

True or False. If the current DR fails, the BDR will be come the DR and a new BDR will be elected.

A

True.

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6
Q

What are the two configurable settings that can influence OSPF DR/BDR election?

A
  • OSPF Interface Priority - Must be a value between 0 and 255. The highest value wins in an election.
  • OSPF Router ID - If the interface priority is tied then the highest Router ID wins in an election.
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7
Q

When would you use a Point to Point network type over a Broadcast network type?

A
  • If you have two routers connected over a single link
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8
Q

True or False. Broadcast network type increases OSPF convergence time.

A

True as all routers need to communicate with the DR and BDR to react to any changes in topology.

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9
Q

What will the router do if you shutdown a routing protocol process? (e.g. shutdown when in router ospf process config mode)

A
  • Brings down all neighbor relationships and clears the OSPF neighbor table
  • Clears the LSDB
  • Clears the IP routing table of any OSPF learned routes
  • Retains OSPF configuration
  • Lists OSPF enabled interfaces in the ‘show ip ospf interface’ command but in a DOWN state
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10
Q

True or False. Neighboring routers will share routes even if their neighboring interfaces have different MTU values.

A

False. However the neighbors may still be visible when using the ‘show ip ospf neighbor’ command.

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11
Q

What happens if two neighboring routers use different OSPF network types?

A
  • The two routers become fully adjacent neighbors (reach a FULL state)
  • They exchange their LSDBs
  • They do not add IP routes to their routing tables as the routes are not learned
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12
Q

What is an OSPF Network Type?

A
  • Refers to the type of connection between OSPF neighbors.
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13
Q

If there is only a single router on a network segment, what will happen in relation to DRs and BDRs?

A

Only a DR will exist and that router will become the DR.

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14
Q

What is the order of priority for DR selection?

A
  1. BDR - BDR will always become DR first
  2. Highest OSPF interface priority (default of 1 on all interfaces) - Used to select BDR
  3. Highest router ID - Used to select BDR
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15
Q

What command could you use to find the Router State (DR/BDR/DROther), Router ID, and Interface Priority of an interface?

A

show ip ospf int <interface></interface>

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16
Q

True or False. If the Interface Priority of an interface is 0 it will always be DR.

A

False. It can never be DR or BDR.

17
Q

What does Preemptive mean in the context of DRs and BDRs?

A
  • It means that if a new router becomes highest priority in the segment, it will automatically become DR
  • If it were non-preemptive, it would not become DR unless the OSPF process is reset or the current DR goes down
18
Q

What is a DR?

A
  • A DR (Designated Router) is a router on a Broadcast type OSPF network (such as an Ethernet LAN) that receives LSAs from all other OSPF neighbors on the LAN and ensures that all neighbors have a copy, as opposed to all neighbors flooding all LSAs to each other.
19
Q

What is a BDR?

A
  • A BDR (Backup Designated Router) will become the DR if the current DR fails. They exchange LSAs with the DR and DROthers the same as DRs do.
20
Q

What multicast address is used specifically to send traffic to a DR/BDR?

A

224.0.0.6

21
Q

True or False. OSPF routers in the Point to Point network type still use 224.0.0.5 to send Hellos to dynamically discover neighbors.

A

True. However a DR and BDR are not elected.

22
Q

What command do you use to change the OSPF network type statically?

A

ip ospf network <type></type>

23
Q

What is the default Hello and Dead timer of the non-broadcast OSPF network type?

A
  • Default Hello is 30 seconds
  • Default Dead is 120 seconds