A customer needs a wired upgrade for a building on its main campus. The exhibit shows the switches that the architect has selected for each closet and me existing cabling. The customer is not open to changing the cabling. The customer requires link redundancy for the uplinks from each closet and for the links from the building to the core. In non link failure situations, the uplinks from each closet must support at least 20Gbps, and the building as a whole must have at least 20 Gbps to the core in non link failure situations Which two options Tor connecting the closets to the network core are valid? (select two.)
A.
Connect me Floor 2 switch stack to Floor 1 with two fiber connections, DO me same for Floor 3. connect the Floor 1 switch stack to the network cone with two fiber connections.
B.
Connect the switch stack on each floor directly to the network cone on two "fiber connections per floor. Achieve this by patching the inter-floor fiber through to the inter-building fiber.
C.
Combine the nine switches on the three floors into a single switch stack with the MM QM3 fiber cables in a ring topology. Connect two Floor 1 members to the network core with one fiber connection each.
D.
Combine the nine switches on all three floors into a single switch slack with stacking cables in a ring topology. Connect two Floor f members to the network core with one fiber connection each
E.
Add two aggregation switches in the Floor 1closet. Connect the switch stack for each closet to the aggregation switches on two fiber links each and the aggregation switches to the core on two fiber links.
Answer:
BE
User Votes:
A 1 votes
50%
B
50%
C
50%
D
50%
E 1 votes
50%
Discussions
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ccossio14
11 months, 3 weeks ago
can do B because there is only 6 stands to the core, and in order to do B you need 12 stands to achieve 20G per closet
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can do B because there is only 6 stands to the core, and in order to do B you need 12 stands to achieve 20G per closet