Quant Exam  >  Quant Tests  >  IPv6, Networking Quiz - Quant MCQ

IPv6, Networking Quiz - Quant MCQ


Test Description

15 Questions MCQ Test - IPv6, Networking Quiz

IPv6, Networking Quiz for Quant 2024 is part of Quant preparation. The IPv6, Networking Quiz questions and answers have been prepared according to the Quant exam syllabus.The IPv6, Networking Quiz MCQs are made for Quant 2024 Exam. Find important definitions, questions, notes, meanings, examples, exercises, MCQs and online tests for IPv6, Networking Quiz below.
Solutions of IPv6, Networking Quiz questions in English are available as part of our course for Quant & IPv6, Networking Quiz solutions in Hindi for Quant course. Download more important topics, notes, lectures and mock test series for Quant Exam by signing up for free. Attempt IPv6, Networking Quiz | 15 questions in 30 minutes | Mock test for Quant preparation | Free important questions MCQ to study for Quant Exam | Download free PDF with solutions
IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 1

Which of the following is true when describing a multicast address?

Detailed Solution for IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 1
Packets addressed to a multicast address are delivered to all interfaces identified by the multicast address, the same as in IPv4. It is also called a one-to-many address. You can always tell a multicast address in IPv6 because multicast addresses always start with FF.
IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 2

Which of the following is true when describing a unicast address?

Detailed Solution for IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 2
Packets addressed to a unicast address are delivered to a single interface. For load balancing, multiple interfaces can use the same address.
1 Crore+ students have signed up on EduRev. Have you? Download the App
IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 3

To enable OSPFv3, which of the following would you use?

Detailed Solution for IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 3
To enable OSPFv3, you enable the protocol as with RIPng. The command string is ipv6 ospf <process-id> area <area-id>.
IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 4

What multicast addresses does RIPng use?

Detailed Solution for IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 4
RIPng uses the multicast IPv6 address of FF02::9. If you remember the multicast addresses for IPv4, the numbers at the end of each IPv6 address are the same.
IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 5

Which statement(s) about IPv6 addresses are true?

  1. Leading zeros are required.
  2. Two colons (::) are used to represent successive hexadecimal fields of zeros.
  3. Two colons (::) are used to separate fields.
  4. A single interface will have multiple IPv6 addresses of different types.
Detailed Solution for IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 5
In order to shorten the written length of an IPv6 address, successive fields of zeros may be replaced by double colons. In trying to shorten the address further, leading zeros may also be removed. Just as with IPv4, a single device's interface can have more than one address; with IPv6 there are more types of addresses and the same rule applies. There can be link-local, global unicast, and multicast addresses all assigned to the same interface.
IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 6

To enable RIPng, which of the following would you use?

Detailed Solution for IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 6
It's pretty simple to enable RIPng for IPv6. You configure it right on the interface where you want RIP to run with the ipv6 router rip number command.
IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 7

Which of the following is true when describing a global unicast address?

Detailed Solution for IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 7
Unlike unicast addresses, global unicast addresses are meant to be routed.
IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 8

What two multicast addresses does OSPFv3 use?

  1. FF02::A
  2. FF02::9
  3. FF02::5
  4. FF02::6
Detailed Solution for IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 8
Adjacencies and next-hop attributes now use link-local addresses, and OSPFv3 still uses multicast traffic to send its updates and acknowledgments with the addresses FF02::5 for OSPF routers and FF02::6 for OSPF designated routers. These are the replacements for 224.0.0.5 and 224.0.0.6, respectively.
IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 9

To enable EIGRP, which of the following would you use?

  1. Router1(config-if)# ipv6 ospf 10 area 0.0.0.0
  2. Router1(config-if)# ipv6 router rip 1
  3. Router1(config)# ipv6 router eigrp 10
  4. Router1(config-rtr)# no shutdown
  5. Router1(config-if)# ipv6 eigrp 10
Detailed Solution for IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 9
Unlike RIPng and OSPFv3, you need to configure EIGRP both from global configuration mode and from interface mode, and you have to enable the command with the no shutdown command.
IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 10

What multicast addresses does EIGRPv6 use?

Detailed Solution for IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 10
EIGRPv6's multicast address stayed very near the same. In IPv4 it was 224.0.0.10; now it is FF02::A (A=10 in hexadecimal notation).
IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 11

Which of the following is true when describing a link-local address?

Detailed Solution for IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 11
Link-local addresses are meant for throwing together a temporary LAN for meetings or a small LAN that is not going to be routed but needs to share and access files and services locally.
IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 12

Which of the following is true when describing a unique local address?

Detailed Solution for IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 12
These addresses are meant for nonrouting purposes like link-local, but they are almost globally unique so it is unlikely they will have an address overlap. Unique local addresses were designed as a replacement for site-local addresses.
IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 13

Which of the following is true when describing an anycast address?

Detailed Solution for IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 13
Anycast addresses identify multiple interfaces, which is the same as multicast; however, the big difference is that the anycast packet is only delivered to one address, the first one it finds defined in the terms of routing distance. This address can also be called one-to-one-of-many.
IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 14

You want to ping the loopback address of your local host(with IPv6). What will you type?

Detailed Solution for IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 14
The loopback address with IPv4 is 127.0.0.1. With IPv6, that address is ::1.
IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 15

Which statement(s) about IPv4 and IPv6 addresses are true?

  1. An IPv6 address is 32 bits long, represented in hexidecimal.
  2. An IPv6 address is 128 bits long, represented in decimal.
  3. An IPv4 address is 32 bits long, represented in decimal.
  4. An IPv6 address is 128 bits long, represented in hexidecimal.
Detailed Solution for IPv6, Networking Quiz - Question 15
IPv4 addresses are 32 bits long and are represented in decimal format. IPv6 addresses are 128 bits long and represented in hexadecimal format.
Information about IPv6, Networking Quiz Page
In this test you can find the Exam questions for IPv6, Networking Quiz solved & explained in the simplest way possible. Besides giving Questions and answers for IPv6, Networking Quiz, EduRev gives you an ample number of Online tests for practice
Download as PDF