Answer:
B
Explanation
A working interface (in an up/up state) can still suffer from issues related to the physical cabling
as well. The cabling problems might not be bad enough to cause a complete failure, but the
transmission failures result in some frames failing to pass successfully over the cable. For
example, excessive interference on the cable can cause the various input error counters to keep
growing larger, especially the CRC counter. In particular, if the CRC errors grow, but the
collisions counters do not, the problem might simply be interference on the cable. (The switch
counts each collided frame as one form of input error as well.)
Reference: CCNA 200-301 Official Cert Guide, Volume 1 page 168
In this question, only the input errors and CRC errors grow -> “The cable connected between
two devices is faulty” is the best choice.
Note: One problem, called late collisions, points to the classic duplex mismatch problem. But
there is no late collision errors so duplex mismatch is not an in this question.
Question 33
Refer to the exhibit.
Routers R1 and R3 have the default configuration. The router R2 priority is set to 99. Which
commands on R3 configure it as the DR in the 10.0.4.0/24 network?
A. R3(config)#interface Gig0/1
R3(config-if)#ip ospf priority 100
B. R3(config)#interface Gig0/0
R3(config-if)#ip ospf priority 100
C. R3(config)#interface Gig0/0
R3(config-if)#ip ospf priority 1
D. R3(config)#interface Gig0/1
R3(config-if)#ip ospf priority 0
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