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LPI Exam 202-450 Topic 6 Question 101 Discussion

Actual exam question for LPI's 202-450 exam
Question #: 101
Topic #: 6
[All 202-450 Questions]

To which destination will a route appear in the Linux routing table after activating IPv6 on a router's network interface, even when no global IPv6 addresses have been assigned to the interface?

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Suggested Answer: A

Contribute your Thoughts:

Gladys
2 months ago
E seems too broad. I'm confident A is the right answer here.
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Johnetta
2 months ago
Yeah, A) fe80::/10 makes sense for the destination in the routing table.
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Miss
2 months ago
I agree, A) fe80::/10 seems like the right choice.
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Nan
2 months ago
I think A) fe80::/10 is the correct answer.
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Jesusa
2 months ago
Haha, I bet the answer is C. As if the default IPv6 route 0::/0 would magically appear just by enabling IPv6!
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Tish
1 months ago
No, it's actually D) fe80::/64
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Tonette
1 months ago
E) 2000::/3
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Lili
1 months ago
D) fe80::/64
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Coral
2 months ago
A) fe80::/10
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Rodolfo
3 months ago
But wouldn't it be more specific to use fe80::/64, which is the subnet for link-local addresses?
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Glenna
3 months ago
I agree with Mable, because fe80::/10 is the link-local address range for IPv6.
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Daniel
3 months ago
Hmm, I'm going with D. The link-local IPv6 prefix fe80::/64 is what I learned should be assigned.
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Felicitas
3 months ago
I think B is the correct answer. The default IPv6 route 0::/0 should appear in the routing table.
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Mable
3 months ago
I think the route will appear as fe80::/10 in the routing table.
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Jesus
3 months ago
Definitely A. The link-local IPv6 prefix fe80::/10 is automatically assigned to the router's interface when IPv6 is enabled, even without a global IPv6 address.
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Gail
2 months ago
C) 0::/0 seems like a possible choice too.
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Angelo
2 months ago
I think it's A) fe80::/10.
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Ellsworth
2 months ago
D) fe80::/64 is also a valid option.
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France
3 months ago
A) fe80::/10 is correct.
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