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Huawei Exam H12-831_V1.0 Topic 1 Question 50 Discussion

Actual exam question for Huawei's H12-831_V1.0 exam
Question #: 50
Topic #: 1
[All H12-831_V1.0 Questions]

Ethernet is a network that supports broadcasting, and once there is a loop in the network, this simple broadcasting mechanism can cause catastrophic consequences. Which of the following phenomena may be caused by loops

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: A, B, C, D

Contribute your Thoughts:

Laura
4 months ago
Wait, are we talking about Ethernet or the Eternal Network? Because if it's the Eternal Network, all the answers are correct - the device can't log in, the pings are serious, the CPU is overloaded, and the interface is drowning in broadcast messages. Good luck fixing that one!
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Desire
3 months ago
C) CPUOccupancy exceeds70%
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Charlena
4 months ago
B) pass throughPINGSerious packet loss during network test with command
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Lai
4 months ago
A) The device cannot log in remotely
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Trinidad
4 months ago
I have experienced receiving a large number of broadcast messages due to network loops.
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Wendell
4 months ago
I believe loops can also prevent devices from logging in remotely.
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Ena
5 months ago
I'm going with D. Seeing a ton of broadcast messages on the interface? That's the smoking gun for a nasty network loop. Time to call in the loop police!
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Leatha
3 months ago
Let's call in the loop police to solve this issue.
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Lorrie
3 months ago
Definitely a network loop causing that. Time to investigate!
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Marshall
3 months ago
I think D is the culprit. Too many broadcast messages on the interface.
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Terrilyn
3 months ago
Agreed, better investigate and fix that loop before it causes more problems.
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Vivan
4 months ago
Definitely, loops can really mess up a network. Gotta track down the source of those broadcasts.
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Karl
4 months ago
I think it's D too. Those broadcast messages are a sure sign of trouble.
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Wai
5 months ago
Yeah, I agree. It can also lead to high CPU occupancy.
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Marleen
5 months ago
Hah, B is clearly the right answer. Packet loss during network tests? That's a dead giveaway of a looping network. Grab your fishing net, we're going loop hunting!
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Garry
5 months ago
I would say C. The CPU on the switch or router is going to be maxed out trying to handle all the broadcast traffic. Time to find the loop and stop this madness!
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Derrick
4 months ago
B) pass throughPINGSerious packet loss during network test with command
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Graciela
4 months ago
A) The device cannot log in remotely
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Shonda
5 months ago
I think loops in the network can cause serious packet loss.
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Miss
5 months ago
Definitely D. The massive influx of broadcast messages due to the loop will bring down the network. Who needs a CPU when the network is melting down?
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Adell
4 months ago
D) use on the deviceDISPLAY INTERFA, CEcommand to view interface statistics, it is found that the interface receives a large number of broadcast message
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Claudio
4 months ago
C) CPUOccupancy exceeds70%
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Margo
4 months ago
B) pass throughPINGSerious packet loss during network test with command
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Alberto
5 months ago
A) The device cannot log in remotely
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