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Share your ICND2 v3.0 Experience

September 16th, 2016 in ICND2 200-105 Go to comments

The new ICND2 200-105 exam has come to replace the old ICND2 200-101 exam. We create the “Share your ICND2 v3.0 Experience” for everyone to share their experience after taking this exam.

Note for ICND2: There are no VRRP, GLBP, NetFlow and NAT questions (and they are not technologies learned in this exam).

Please share with us your experience after taking the ICND2 200-105 exam, your materials, the way you learned, your recommendations… But please DO NOT share any information about the detail of the exam or your personal information, your score, exam date and location, your email…

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  1. Takz
    December 8th, 2016

    RSVP, according to this

    RSVP is the only CAC mechanism that makes a bandwidth reservation and does not make a call admission decision based on a “best guess look-ahead” before the call is set up. This gives RSVP the unique advantage of not only providing CAC for voice, but also guaranteeing the QoS against changing network conditions for the duration of the call.

    http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/td/docs/ios/solutions_docs/voip_solutions/CAC.html#wp903809

  2. ToF
    December 8th, 2016

    @Takz Thanks Man!!!

  3. ToF
    December 8th, 2016

    @Takz did you get this question in your test?

  4. ninja
    December 8th, 2016

    does anyone have daves questions

  5. Vince
    December 8th, 2016

    @Ghosy can you tell me which are the wrong answers from Dave’s QUIZ ?

  6. Takz
    December 8th, 2016

    No, not that I recall, at least on the first try. I’m up for a second try on saturday.

  7. ToF
    December 8th, 2016

    Good luck!!

  8. Ghosy
    December 8th, 2016

    just look on the sites before on this board all wrong answers in daves quiz are there

  9. Takz
    December 8th, 2016

    Thanks, I’ll let you know if I get any new question or strange ones for that matter.

  10. Anonymous
    December 8th, 2016

    What Sims / Labs have people been seeing on the test lately?

  11. Takz
    December 8th, 2016

    EiGRP with the variance command for R1, OSPF, GRE TUNNEL, The topology do not change the content does, ex where the sim here show equally load balanced, you’ll see the same but with the variance command, making it unequally load balanced. That was my case on the first ICND 2 v3 try.

  12. Takz
    December 8th, 2016

    Recalling more questions, there was another one with the Default information originate command injecting a Satatic route asking if the routers will form a OSPF relatioship, the route in question causes a loop, the choices where, A It will learn the routes including the static, B No relationship,
    Its question 40 in the passleader dump I think. My asnwer was It will learn the routes including the static one even if it creates a loop. But it still nags me….

  13. Tubs
    December 9th, 2016

    Sounds like the frame relay lab is gone, are all frame relay multiple choice questions gone in the current test as well?

  14. Ghosy
    December 9th, 2016

    Yes no frame relay anymore

  15. krixs
    December 9th, 2016

    @Takz could you share us the passleader dump?? thanks.

  16. Takz
    December 9th, 2016

    The one DAVE4 posted a few pages up in the ICND2 Package.

  17. Takz
    December 9th, 2016

    @TOF Thanks

  18. TMan
    December 9th, 2016

    What do you guys think of lead2pass (200-105) dumps in Daves package? In the beginning the have like the real v3 exam questions, what about those in the end of the pdf? Are they legit for v3 and has anyone saw in the new exam? Thanks

  19. Maxx
    December 9th, 2016

    Passed today…Thank you New Dumps for the great stuff.

  20. Charm242
    December 9th, 2016

    Hello Maxx, Do mind sharing some question. I am getting ready to retake it on Monday. I just don’t want to spend another 150 Thanks in advance

  21. krixs
    December 10th, 2016

    @Maxx congrat….which dump did u studied??

  22. ToF
    December 10th, 2016

    @Takz what did you do guys at your test???

  23. Vince
    December 10th, 2016

    Can someone share labs from exams?

  24. @WAYNE & DAVE
    December 11th, 2016

    We are new to this but eager to assist. Does anyone have the new dumps with questionable answers that still need research. We’ll do our best to verify and assist. “ProfesssorK” at g-***mail *&* dot com

  25. Vince
    December 11th, 2016

    Please share some links here

  26. TMan
    December 12th, 2016

    Which two statements about the spanning tree BRIDGE ID are true?

    A.The bridge ID is transmitted in the IP header to elect the root bridge
    B. The bridge priority must be incremented in blocks of 4096 <
    C. It is composed of an 8-bit bridge priority and a 16-bit system ID extension
    D. The system ID extension is a value between 1 and 4095 < The Extended System ID is a value of 1 to 4095
    E. It is composed of a 4-bit bridge priority and a 12-bit system ID extension (Bridge ID – 8bytes (2 Bridge Priority+6 MAC address)

    http://www.firewall.cx/networking-topics/protocols/spanning-tree-protocol/1054-spanning-tree-protocol-root-bridge-election.html

  27. SomeGuy
    December 12th, 2016

    Concerning the question:
    “Which two statements about the spanning tree BRIDGE ID are true?”

    The link you have provided is good information. It suggest that there are three answers:
    B. The bridge priority must be incremented in blocks of 4096
    D. The system ID extension is a value between 1 and 4095
    E. It is composed of a 4-bit bridge priority and a 12-bit system ID extension

    I believe that the answer is B & E only because the system ID extension (D) corresponds to the
    @TMan
    VLAN. I think E is “more” correct or the one that cisco would look for. Quotes below from the same link you mentioned above:

    B. The bridge priority must be incremented in blocks of 4096
    “The Bridge Priority increments in blocks of 4096”
    E. It is composed of a 4-bit bridge priority and a 12-bit system ID extension
    “The two values (Bridge Priority + System ID Extension) together make up the Bridge ID used to elect the Root Bridge.”

  28. TMan
    December 12th, 2016

    This is from Odom’s book:
    “The STP bridge ID (BID) is an 8-byte value unique to each switch. The bridge ID consists
    of a 2-byte priority field and a 6-byte system ID, with the system ID being based on a universal
    (burned-in) MAC address in each switch. Using a burned-in MAC address ensures that
    each switch’s bridge ID will be unique”

    But Bridge ID is kinda too light when you say this way. 16 bit, really?

  29. SomeGuy
    December 12th, 2016

    @ TMan

    This tripped me up also. I think the difference comes when the question asked SPANNING TREE Bridge ID. If we were just talking about the Bridge ID with Common Spanning Tree I would say the answers were B & D, but the default cisco Spanning Tree is PVST+, which “By default, Cisco’s Per-VLAN Spanning-Tree Plus (PVST+) adds this System ID Extension (sys-id-ext) to the Bridge Priority.”

    Its a shit question, but I still think the best answer is B & E

  30. TMan
    December 12th, 2016

    If you put it this way, I agree.
    Anyone got this question in exam and 100% on LAN switching technologies?

  31. JT
    December 12th, 2016

    Does anyone have a source for a free version of Packet Tracer that doesnt require a login? Thanks in advance for any help.

  32. krixs
    December 13th, 2016
  33. Mitch
    December 13th, 2016

    Do you

  34. Jessica
    December 13th, 2016

    Please, could you share with me an actual dumps? chedmit () gmail () com

  35. Takz
    December 13th, 2016

    @TOF Passed on Saturday with passleader and Daves stuff. New IPv6 ACL question that are not here, For example Which Type of ACL IPv6 Applies first in order of preference. Choices where Named ACL, Router ACL, Standard ACL cant remember if its worded so. Select the capabilities of DMVPN, And what statements on ACE are matched on the APIC-EM Trace Utility, cant remember the choices for this one. Everything else is according to DAVEs stuff, however do bear in mind that some answers are discussed in this forum which deffer from DAVEs quiz answers.

  36. Hoth
    December 13th, 2016

    @ Takz – Is Passleader stuff worth getting? Is it more accurate than Daves stuff?

  37. Vince
    December 13th, 2016

    Takz I found few questions from Dave’s test that are incorect. In passLEader are different answers. What labs do you get in exam. Thanks!

  38. New Dumps
    December 13th, 2016

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  39. Thefeelofcotton
    December 14th, 2016

    I feel like a combination of Dave’s quiz and the dumps with a solid foundational knowledge will be good enough for anyone to pass. Just be sure to cross reference all questions to be sure.

  40. Thefeelofcotton
    December 14th, 2016

    I failed the exam twice, first time was with just dumps scored a 615, second time I had finished 3 chapters of Todd Lammle’s book and scored a 735. I feel like with Dave’s quiz, the dumps, and that fact that I’ll have finished Lammle’s book I’ll be good to go this this Thursday!

  41. Vince
    December 14th, 2016

    Thefeelofcotton you will do it this time! Do you remember sims in exam that you have?

  42. Thefeelofcotton
    December 14th, 2016

    It was the same Sims both times. Eigrp, gre, and Ospf. They’re directly out of the dumps and I can confirm they’re correct, at least to the best of my knowledge. I went through the commands just to double check since I knew what to look for the 2nd time.

  43. Vince
    December 14th, 2016

    I am worried becouse some of Daves questions are not correct.I find in the passlead different answers. Do you check all Daves Quizz?

  44. Thefeelofcotton
    December 14th, 2016

    I haven’t checked all of it, but if you look back at the previous pages of this thread there are some questions answered with references to Cisco too. Use those in your studies as well.

  45. Vince
    December 14th, 2016

    Questions : 31 (In passlead answer is D – It sends data on VLAN1) , 58 (in passleader correct is D – in daves A) , 68 ( in pass is A in daves D)

    These are 3 questions that migth be wrong

  46. Thefeelofcotton
    December 14th, 2016

    Like I said, be sure to research any questions that don’t match up. Most of the dumps are consistent with their answers. On the actual exam there are going to be a few questions not on the dumps or Dave’s quiz. Just be ready.

  47. Vince
    December 14th, 2016

    Thanks!

  48. thefeelofcotton
    December 14th, 2016

    Also, just as a side note. I was reading chapter 7 of Todd Lammle’s book today which covers WAN technologies and he specifically mentions Frame Relay, along with others, as being a Cisco exam objective. I wouldn’t be so quick to dismiss frame relay just yet, no matter what Cisco says. If there is one thing I have learned is that Cisco LOVES to say one thing and do another. or make the questions so vague and poorly worded that it could be any number of correct answers.

  49. Thefeelofcotton
    December 14th, 2016

    One thing I love about Lammle’s books is he draws from questions on the exam. I’ve seen him mention “notes” in his book that are almost verbatim questions from the exam. If any of you haven’t read his book and are still struggling, I highly recommend reading it.

    I read the OCG for the ICND1 100-105 and it was long and very dry material which made it that much more difficult for me to retain the information. For this exam I haven’t, and most likely won’t, touch the OCG. Just some food for thought.

  50. thefeelofcotton
    December 14th, 2016

    In regards to question 32 on Dave’s latest quiz, “Which statement about DTP is true?” this is directly from Cisco’s website and documentation: “If the port is trunking in ISL mode, DTP packets are sent out on VLAN 1, otherwise (for 802.1Q trunking or non-trunking ports) they are sent out on the native VLAN.”

    Now, this is one of those instances where there are two correct answers to the question and you have to figure out which one is the “Cisco answer”. As ISL is no longer supported by Cisco, the answer SHOULD be A: It uses the native VLAN.

    I hate how Cisco does this, but it’s why their certifications are so highly respected.

    HTH

  51. thefeelofcotton
    December 14th, 2016

    Also in reference to Q 39: Which two circumstances can cause collision domain issues on VLAN Domain? This is again, a very vaugely worded q

  52. thefeelofcotton
    December 14th, 2016

    *Continued from previous post*
    This again is a very vaguely worded question by Cisco. According to documentation from their website (http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/support/docs/lan-switching/virtual-lans-vlan-trunking-protocol-vlans-vtp/23637-slow-int-vlan-connect.html): “So, after you have diagnosed a case, check the items listed below.

    In the case of a shared segment:

    determine if the segment is overloaded or oversubscribed
    determine if the segment is healthy (including if the cable length is correct, if attenuation is within the norm, and if there are physical damages of the medium)
    determine if the network port and all NICs connected to a segment have compatible settings
    determine if the NIC is performing well (and running the latest driver)
    determine if the network port continues to show increasing errors
    determine if the network port is overloaded (especially if it is a server port)

    In the case of a point-to-point shared segment, or collisionless (full-duplex) segment:

    determine the port and NIC-compatible configuration
    determine the health of the segment
    determine the health of the NIC
    look for network port errors or oversubscription”

    The questions doesn’t specify if it is a shared segment or a PPP shared segment. So, we have to figure out what the Cisco answer is yet again.

  53. Vince
    December 14th, 2016

    Yes I trully agree with you. Some of questions are so tricky. Look 58 and 68 q from Dave. It seems to be wrong.

  54. thefeelofcotton
    December 14th, 2016

    For Q 53: What type of interface can negotiate an IP address for a PPPoE Client?

    According to Cisco (http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/td/docs/ios-xml/ios/bbdsl/configuration/xe-3s/bba-pppoe-client.html#GUID-B1DB9A75-76E3-4553-B3C3-A73046F5A505) the answer is B.

    “Specifies that the IP address for a particular interface is obtained via PPP/IP Control Protocol (IPCP) address negotiation. The IP address for dialer interface 1 will be obtained via PPP/IPCP address negotiation.”

  55. Vince
    December 14th, 2016

    Yes thats right. Could you check 58 and 68 in your sources?

  56. TMan
    December 14th, 2016

    Question from earlier comments:

    What should be config on switch1 and switch2 to start ommunication.. (Etherchannel)

    a. Switch1 Auto
    b. Switch2 Auto
    c. Switch1 on
    d. Switch2 on
    e. Switch1 active (LACP)
    f. Switch2 active (LACP)

    Anyone got this question?

  57. thefeelofcotton
    December 14th, 2016

    I couldn’t find anything to support the answers for either question Vince. I do remember reading that the Dialer interface assigns IP addresses in a PPP situation. I will finish reading Lammle’s book tonight and see if that leads me to a more definitive answer.

  58. Vince
    December 14th, 2016

    EtherChannel Configuration and Load Balancing

    Complete the following steps to configure EtherChannel on Switch 1. Switch 2 has EtherChannel preconfigured.

    Step 1. On Switch 1, configure the two ports that connect to Switch 2 to use channel group 1 and LACP active mode:

    Switch1# configure terminal
    Switch1(config)# interface range Ethernet 1/1-2
    Switch1(config-if-range)# channel-group 1 mode active
    Creating a port-channel interface Port-channel 1

  59. Vince
    December 14th, 2016

    PAgP and LACP Modes

    This section lists the user-configurable EtherChannel modes for the channel-group interface configuration command. Switch interfaces exchange PAgP packets only with partner interfaces with the auto or desirable mode configuration. Switch interfaces exchange LACP packets only with partner interfaces with the active or passive mode configuration. Interfaces with the on mode configuration do not exchange PAgP or LACP packets.

    active—Places an interface into an active negotiation state, in which the interface starts negotiations with other interfaces through the send of LACP packets.

    auto—Places an interface into a passive negotiation state, in which the interface responds to PAgP packets that the interface receives but does not start PAgP packet negotiation. This setting minimizes the transmission of PAgP packets.

    desirable—Places an interface into an active negotiation state, in which the interface starts negotiations with other interfaces through the send of PAgP packets.

    on—Forces the interface into an EtherChannel without PAgP or LACP. With the on mode, a usable EtherChannel exists only when an interface group in the on mode has a connection to another interface group in the on mode.

    passive—Places an interface into a passive negotiation state, in which the interface responds to LACP packets that the interface receives, but does not start LACP packet negotiation. This setting minimizes the transmission of LACP packets.

    There are only three valid combinations to run the LACP link aggregate, as this table shows:
    Switch Switch Comments
    active active Recommended.
    active passive Link aggregation occurs if negotiation is successful.
    on on Link aggregation occurs without LACP. Although this works, this combination is not recommended.

  60. moss
    December 14th, 2016

    failed today with 750..sims are Eigrp, gre, and Ospf…..
    configuration is same…..

  61. Vince
    December 14th, 2016

    Sorry moss. You will pass it next time. Do you remember some of your questions?

  62. Vince
    December 14th, 2016

    I found one more wrong question from Dave:

    You enter the show ipv6 route command on an OSPF device and the device displays a route.
    Which conclusion can you draw about the environment?

    A. OSPF is distributing IPv6 routes to BGP.
    B. The router is designated as an ABR.
    C. The router is designated as totally stubby.
    D. OSPFv3 is in use.

    All forums pick up A as correct. In Dave is D. What guys you think?

  63. thefeelofcotton
    December 14th, 2016

    I think its yet another poorly worded question by Cisco lol

  64. TMan
    December 14th, 2016

    How can you disable DTP on a switch port?

    A. Configure the switch port as a trunk.
    B. Add an interface on the switch to a channel group.
    C. Change the operational mode to static access.
    D. Change the administrative mode to access

    A lot of discussions were about this question.
    Try to to change any interface to trunk and to administrative mode access, after changes use sh dtp command.
    I believe the most right answer is D.

  65. thefeelofcotton
    December 14th, 2016

    @TMan I am inclined to agree because the only way to shut off trunking all together is by configuring the port as an access port.

  66. TMan
    December 14th, 2016

    Was A your pick?

  67. TMan
    December 14th, 2016

    BTW, maybe you could share your questions and answers that you choose in exam? t

  68. Uncle Rico
    December 14th, 2016

    I think I’ll go with C on that one. Prior to changing the port from default static to trunk, the “Operational Mode” is “static access” and “Administrative Mode” is “dynamic auto”.

    Switch#show int gi0/1 switchport
    Name: Gig0/1
    Switchport: Enabled
    Administrative Mode: dynamic auto <—————-
    Operational Mode: static access <——————

    After changing it to a Trunk port,

    Switch#show int gi0/1 switchport
    Name: Gig0/1
    Switchport: Enabled
    Administrative Mode: trunk <—————–
    Operational Mode: trunk <—————–

    Therefor, D would be wrong since there's no "Administrative Mode" you can change to "access". It's either "Trunk" or "Dynamic Auto". So C would be correct because the "Operational Mode" can be changed to "static access". What yall think?

  69. Charm242
    December 14th, 2016

    D is there right answer. Why?
    -if you issue the following command on your switch, you should be able to see both the admin and the operational modes . Show Interface fa0/1 switchport.
    –Remember, DTP is by default turned on each switch
    –Don’t fool yourself to use the other answer
    –For your convenience please refer to this
    The DTP negotiation goes off in these situations:

    1- switchport nonegotiate

    2- Switchport mode access

    3- Switchport mode dot1q-tunnel

  70. Charm242
    December 14th, 2016

    For Clarification purpose, I am adding this:

    switchport mode trunk ;

    switchport nonegotiate
    Nonegotiate Always trunks on this end; does not send DTP messages (good when other switch is a non-Cisco switch) On

    switchport mode access;

    switchport nonegotiate
    Access (with nonegotiate) Never trunks; does not send DTP messages (Never trunks)

    switchport mode trunk
    Trunk Always trunks on this end; sends DTP to help other side choose to trunk On, desirable, auto

    switchport mode dynamic desirable
    Desirable Sends DTP messages, and trunks if negotiation succeeds On, desirable, auto

    switchport mode dynamic auto
    Auto Replies to DTP messages, and trunks if negotiation succeeds On, desirable

    switchport mode access
    Access Never trunks; sends DTP to help other side reach same conclusion (Never trunks)

  71. Uncle Rico
    December 14th, 2016

    @ Charm242… I see what you’re saying. However, the question isn’t what command will disable DTP. The following is the result from going from a Trunk to an Access port.

    Switch(config-if)#switchport mode access
    Switch#show int gi0/1 switchport
    Name: Gig0/1
    Switchport: Enabled
    Administrative Mode: static access
    Operational Mode: static access <———- Pudding

    And so, The Administrative Mode and the Operational Mode change to "static access"

    C. Change the operational mode to static access. <———- we have a match
    D. Change the administrative mode to access

    D says to change the "change the administrative mode to access"… not "static access" as is the result from typing in the command you pointed out. You can go with D, I'll go with C.

  72. thefeelofcotton
    December 14th, 2016

    @Uncle Rico, that’s a very interesting take. Again we have to figure out what the “Cisco” answer is, and that may be it.

  73. Takz
    December 14th, 2016

    Labs where, gre, ospf and eigrp, as shown here with some lines changed, yes somesome questions from Dave are wrong, ie, the one about load number within port-channel as the load number is used to know which line to used, then load stands for the preference of the link, not the available pairs. Also the platform which analyses acl, is the Cisco apic-em, this was added on the updated appendix b to oddoms book. I’ll try to remember a few more.

  74. tisa
    December 14th, 2016

    My take is this; we configure the “administrative mode” by applying the commands (access, trunk, dynamic auto, and dynamic desirable). The “operational mode” is the state that port ends up in. Remember DTP is on by default so whatever “administrative mode” you configure, DTP will try to do what is supposed to. By configuring the port to access mode will end up in static access operational mode, same case with dynamic auto. I just configured the four separate administrative modes to test the effect and guess what, it’s only the “switchport mode access” command that has the negotiation of trunking option “off” after running the show interfaces fa0/1 switchport.

  75. Charm242
    December 15th, 2016

    @Uncle Rico
    I don’t know if we are talking about the same question. For clarity sake, I am pasting the question for you.
    -How can you disable DTP on a switch port?
    A. Configure the switch port as a trunk.
    B. Add an interface on the switch to a channel group.
    C. Change the operational mode to static access.
    D. Change the administrative mode to access

    DTP= Dynamic Trunking protocol
    Goal: Protocol that automatically or dynamically negociate a trunk between two switches.
    After the negotiation, both devices will either operate under ISL or Dot1.Q
    Unfortunately, ISL (a Cisco propriatary is no longer supported); therefore, we are left with dot1Q.
    -Now, How do we disable DTP–> In other words, how we stop switches from sending those DTP messages.
    –The answer is to tell the switch to run in the access mode. Please check the difference between Operational mode and Administrator mode.

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    December 15th, 2016

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  77. Charm242
    December 15th, 2016

    @Uncle Rico. Please go to the Cisco ICND2 page 116. I am pasting an example on that page. You will see a switch with an operation mode of access and still trunking
    SW2# show interfaces gigabit0/2 switchport
    Name: Gi0/2
    Switchport: Enabled
    Administrative Mode: dynamic auto
    Operational Mode: static access
    Administrative Trunking Encapsulation: dot1q
    Operational Trunking Encapsulation: native

    Furthermore, the same book that you and I suppose to use for this exam says the following on that very same page:
    Figure 4-6 shows the incorrect configuration along with which side trunks and which does
    not. The side that trunks (SW1 in this case) enables trunking always, using the command
    switchport mode trunk. However, this command does not disable Dynamic Trunking
    Protocol (DTP) negotiations. To cause this particular problem, SW1 also disables DTP negotiation using the switchport nonegotiate command. SW2’s configuration also helps create
    the problem, by using a trunking option that relies on DTP. Because SW1 has disabled DTP,
    SW2’s DTP negotiations fail, and SW2 does not trunk.

    Source: Cisco ICND2 for 200-105

  78. tisa
    December 15th, 2016

    I’m so glad for this discussion. Just to support my thinking with some basic configurations below, note that the “Negotiation of Trunking:” for each mode. Only the access mode has it listed as OFF. To my understanding, the “Negotiation of Trunking:” totals to the DTP mode, I may also be wrong!

    S1(config)#interface fa0/1
    S1(config-if)#switchport mode access

    S1#show interfaces fa0/1 switchport
    Name: Fa0/1
    Switchport: Enabled
    Administrative Mode: static access
    Operational Mode: static access
    Administrative Trunking Encapsulation: dot1q
    Operational Trunking Encapsulation: native
    Negotiation of Trunking: Off
    Access Mode VLAN: 1 (default)
    Trunking Native Mode VLAN: 1 (default)

    ………………………………………….
    S2(config)#interface fa0/1
    S2(config-if)#switchport mode dynamic auto

    S2#show interfaces fa0/1 switchport
    Name: Fa0/1
    Switchport: Enabled
    Administrative Mode: dynamic auto
    Operational Mode: static access
    Administrative Trunking Encapsulation: dot1q
    Operational Trunking Encapsulation: native
    Negotiation of Trunking: On
    Access Mode VLAN: 1 (default)
    Trunking Native Mode VLAN: 1 (default)

    ………………………………………….

    S1(config)#interface fa0/2
    S1(config-if)#switchport mode trunk

    S1#show interfaces fa0/2 switchport
    Name: Fa0/2
    Switchport: Enabled
    Administrative Mode: trunk
    Operational Mode: trunk
    Administrative Trunking Encapsulation: dot1q
    Operational Trunking Encapsulation: dot1q
    Negotiation of Trunking: On
    Access Mode VLAN: 1 (default)
    Trunking Native Mode VLAN: 1 (default)

    ………………………………………………….
    S2(config)#interface fa0/2
    S2(config-if)#switchport mode dynamic desirable

    S2#show interfaces fa0/2 switchport
    Name: Fa0/2
    Switchport: Enabled
    Administrative Mode: dynamic desirable
    Operational Mode: trunk
    Administrative Trunking Encapsulation: dot1q
    Operational Trunking Encapsulation: dot1q
    Negotiation of Trunking: On
    Access Mode VLAN: 1 (default)
    Trunking Native Mode VLAN: 1 (default)

  79. TMan
    December 15th, 2016

    Any drag&drop/match questions in the exam?

  80. Eshak Shaik
    December 15th, 2016

    Hello my friends,

    i need dummy questions and answers of ICND 1 (R&S)

    Can any one help me???
    please

  81. ToF
    December 15th, 2016

    Congrats @Takz!!! Thank you guys for your updated informations!!!!

  82. TMan
    December 15th, 2016

    What statements on ACE are matched on the APIC-EM Trace Utility?
    Can anyone comment this question?

  83. Charm242
    December 15th, 2016

    @TMan

    At every node in the path, the controller reports information about the device and path. For example, if a Layer 2 protocol is used to discover a node, the controller reports that the path is a switched path and labels it as Switched. If the controller detects load balancing decisions being made on a discovered device, it reports the path as an ECMP path and labels it as ECMP. Path trace can identify the following information about the devices and paths:
    • HSRP
    • SVI
    • Layer 2
    • Layer 2 Port Channel
    • Layer 3 Routing Protocol
    • ECMP/TR
    • Netflow
    • ECMP over SVI
    • Subinterface
    • EIGRP
    • Level 3 Recursive Loop
    • VRF
    • ACLs

  84. Uncle Rico
    December 16th, 2016

    Just thought I’d share this with you guys. I usually supplement my readings with videos from Chris Bryant and Laz on Udemy. But lately I’ve been watching Kevin Wallace. There’s no comparison with his delivery of the material compared to anyone else I’ve seen. His lectures are structured just as the Cisco Odom book is. You can purchase his video course from cisco for about 250$ with the discount WALLACE50 code or you can access his course at safaribooksonline. I signed up for the 10 day trial at safaribooksonline and it gives me access to his complete ccna video course. I think I’ll eventually purchase the membership since it gives you access to a lot of other material. Anyhow, the dude rocks. I highly suggest checking him out.

  85. Ecko
    December 16th, 2016

    Hi Guys, can anyone repost the latest dumps ((Dave’s dump and passleader 346q )) please. This discussion getting a bit messy.

  86. Vince
    December 16th, 2016

    Failed today 778. 60 questions, 3 labs same on 9tut( gre,ospf,eigrp). Lot of of new questions snmp-verification,show commands. Maybe next year I will try again.

  87. Charm242
    December 16th, 2016

    I am seriously start wondering about the cisco Certification Exam. I took the test twice and failed with the same score (778). The new exam has some bogus questions not covered on the exam. I just pass my CCNP Switch and Route without issues at all.
    –The only problem I am facing, my CCNP will not be recognized until I pass the ICND2 exam

  88. Vince
    December 16th, 2016

    How many questions do you have in your ICND2?

  89. Thefeelofcotton
    December 16th, 2016

    Just passed with a score of 860 today! Word of advice to everyone, know how to read the show running config command because the same questions change the answers from what we have seen in the dumps. The same answer choices are available, but they are not the correct one. Also comma those of you who are still struggling I highly recommend signing up for Todd lammle practice questions and videos because he pulls a lot of questions straight from the exam. Good luck to everyone!

  90. Charm242
    December 16th, 2016

    @ Vince:
    I had 55 five question son the very first one with 4 SIMs (each 4 questions). Then, On the second test I had 60 question and guess what? my last question was a SIM too (Now picture yourself taking an exam and the very last question takes three seconds to load) at that point you know it is a SIM. Looking at the time, you have only 3 minutes left .

  91. ToF
    December 16th, 2016

    New questions
    BGP states
    trouble shooting “%TUN-5-RECURDOWN” Error Message and Flapping EIGRP/OSPF/BGP Neighbors Over a GRE Tunnel

  92. Vince
    December 16th, 2016

    I dont know I will decide what to do but dor sure I am not going to try again soon.

  93. krixs
    December 17th, 2016

    @vince and @Thefeelofcotton plz share us the questionn as much as possible..i`m taking the test this friday so guys plz help…thanks..

  94. suru
    December 17th, 2016

    I passed 883 now thank you everyone
    daves and pass leader stuffs are valid around 70% and sim is ospf eigrp gre but questions are quite different from 9tut lab sim category. There are many questions that I didnt know

  95. krixs
    December 17th, 2016

    @suru congrats. Could you share us the new question that u faced ..thanks..

  96. Vince
    December 17th, 2016

    What is the difference in labs ( gre,ospf,eigrp). Yesterday it seems to be the same?

  97. Suru
    December 17th, 2016

    um.. I cant remember the accurate questions.
    But one of the question is about routing protocols of stub network.(choose two)
    1)bgp
    2)is-is
    3)ospf
    4)eigrp
    5)rip
    6)ebgp
    etc..
    I choose ospf and eigrp because these protocols are main part of icnd2 haha.. I dont know correct one.

    and there are about why
    in the figure, there is a router and switch which is connected to the router and 2 hosts X Y which are connected to switch.
    maybe… the question is host X cant make connection with host Y. why?
    1) ip address mismatch on host X
    2) ip address mismatch on host y
    3) ip address and subnet mask mismatch on host y
    4) subnetmask mismatch on host y.
    I choose 3.

    and in the sim.
    i cant remember which sim. the answer i choose was passive-interface is configured on the router. the word of advice is dont remember question and answer, but just know how to read show command and relax. I have 30~40 minutes left!!

    In my exam, many questions were talked from this page was taken. (DTP, VLAN, slow vlan etc)
    in ma case
    ->disable dtp
    I choose setting accessmode on management mode.

    good luck!

  98. tisa
    December 17th, 2016

    @hey Vince, I know you might be feeling despair for now but I would argue you not to give up. You might need to step back for a few but don’t take too long. You’ll eventually pass. Best wishes next time.

    @Suru, thanks for the update.
    The question about the stub network, do you recall any answer about static routing and default routing? Because those are the two routes I would think about when I hear about stub networks.

  99. Vince
    December 18th, 2016

    Tisa thank you for your support. I know that I will take it just gonna take some time(and money 🙂 )

  100. New Dumps
    December 18th, 2016

    ICND1 (100-105) = 239Qs and 201Qs
    ICND2 (200-105) = 110Qs and 346Qs
    Latest Dumps in Both PDF & VCE Format.
    Working VCE Player
    All LABS TOPOLOGIES for Packet Tracer 6.0.1
    All time EMAIL Support for any querry.
    You will also get free updates for 60 Days, starting from your contribution date.

    If anyone interesting drop a mail
    FYI – wanninayakegcb at gmail com


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