I'm going to go with A and D, but I can't help but feel like the real answer is B - when the OSPF passive option is enabled. I mean, who doesn't love a good passive-aggressive router? *chuckles*
Ah, the old OSPF multicast address trick! I'm going with A and D. The router needs to establish an OSPF adjacency to start advertising the connected network, and creating a static route to the designated router address (224.0.0.5) will also trigger an advertisement. Easy peasy, lemon squeezy!
This is a tough one! I'm leaning towards A and D, but I can't help but wonder if the answer is a trick question and the router actually advertises the connected network when a static route to 224.0.0.6 is created. After all, that's the OSPF all-designated-routers multicast address, right? *scratches head*
I'm going with A and C. A makes sense, but I'm not sure about D - isn't 224.0.0.5 the OSPF all-routers multicast address, not the designated router address?
A and D seem like the correct options here. The router will advertise the connected network when an OSPF adjacency is established, and when a static route to the OSPF designated router address (224.0.0.5) is created.
Yes, those are the correct options. The router needs to establish an OSPF adjacency and have a static route to the designated router address to advertise the connected network.
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