exam questions

Exam 200-301 All Questions

View all questions & answers for the 200-301 exam

Exam 200-301 topic 1 question 1164 discussion

Actual exam question from Cisco's 200-301
Question #: 1164
Topic #: 1
[All 200-301 Questions]

Which interface condition is occurring in this output?

  • A. collisions
  • B. bad NIC
  • C. duplex mismatch
  • D. broadcast storm
Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: D 🗳️

Comments

Chosen Answer:
This is a voting comment (?). It is better to Upvote an existing comment if you don't have anything to add.
Switch to a voting comment New
Stefino77
Highly Voted 1 year, 2 months ago
BAD Nic
upvoted 6 times
dsmitd33
1 month, 3 weeks ago
Wrong due to reliability being 255 out of 255. This indicates packets are being sent and the interface is functioning properly. Broadcast storm is the correct answer here.
upvoted 1 times
...
...
MeysamDavabi
Most Recent 2 months, 4 weeks ago
Selected Answer: D
Received broadcasts: 3553 out of 7331 packets That’s a very high percentage of broadcast traffic (~48%), which is unusual under normal conditions
upvoted 1 times
...
Kafka_Tamura
6 months, 2 weeks ago
Selected Answer: C
AI Explanation: In the output of show interface fa0/0: Full-duplex is indicated on the interface. However, the transmission rate is extremely low (0 bits/sec), and the message "input packets with dribble condition detected" often signals a duplex mismatch issue. A duplex mismatch occurs when one side of the connection is set to full-duplex while the other is set to half-duplex, leading to performance degradation and errors. In this case, there are no CRC errors or collisions (which would be more typical of issues like faulty cables or NIC problems), but the network activity is unusually low.
upvoted 1 times
...
exiledwl
8 months, 3 weeks ago
Selected Answer: B
How is anyone saying broadcast storm?? Input errors, CRC errors, frame errors, overrun, dropped packets all 0 and not even high utilization...if the question is adamant about an issue which we can't perceive from "show int g0/0" command then it's prob just a bad NIC
upvoted 4 times
...
[Removed]
1 year, 2 months ago
Selected Answer: D
D is correct
upvoted 3 times
...
squagmire
1 year, 3 months ago
I would go with D as well, the others don't make sense to me.
upvoted 3 times
...
[Removed]
1 year, 5 months ago
it must be bad NIC
upvoted 4 times
gten111
8 months, 3 weeks ago
reliability 255/255
upvoted 1 times
...
...
na4o
1 year, 8 months ago
Ignored: Number of received packets ignored by the interface because the interface hardware ran low on internal buffers. These buffers are different from the system buffers mentioned previously in the buffer description. Broadcast storms and bursts of noise can cause the ignored count to be increased. No buffers: Number of received packets discarded because there was no buffer space in the main system. Compare with the ignored count. Broadcast storms on Ethernet networks and bursts of noise on serial lines are often responsible for no input buffer events.
upvoted 2 times
...
Community vote distribution
A (35%)
C (25%)
B (20%)
Other
Most Voted
A voting comment increases the vote count for the chosen answer by one.

Upvoting a comment with a selected answer will also increase the vote count towards that answer by one. So if you see a comment that you already agree with, you can upvote it instead of posting a new comment.

SaveCancel
Loading ...