A customer's servers use ISCSI, and they send data and storage traffic on the same pair of I OGbE links. Is this a best practice for supporting the ISCSI requirements?
Solution:Set up dedicated switches to connect to iSCSl arrays. Connect top of rack (ToR) switches, which will support both data and storage traffic, to those dedicated switches.
Refer to the exhibit.
You want to enable devices in VRF B and VRF C to reach shared resources in VRF A. is this a valid strategy for meeting this goal?
Solution:Create a separate OSPF process for each VRF on Switch-1. Then redistribute each process into the other VRFs' processes.
Your task is to configure an EVPN solution for a dual-stack IPv4 and IPv6 protocol in the overlay networks. Is this statement about EVPN and IPv6 correct?
Solution:Different virtual MAC must be used for IPv4 andIPv6 Active Gateway.
Is this a way that a data center technology can help meet requirements for multi-tenancy?
Solution:Virtual Extensible LAN (VXLAN) provides millions of IDs to scale for the needs of a multi-tenant environment
You plan to use multi-protocol BGP to implement dynamic VRF route leaking on an ArubaOS-CX switch.
Is this a rule for the setup?
Solution:You can only leak routes between up to three VRFs.
Refer to the exhibit.
:The company wants AtubaOS-CX switches to provide VXLAN services for several VMs and servers, as shown in the exhibit. Hypervisors will not run VXLAN for this solution. Is this part of a valid configuration to meet the requirements?
Solution:Attach VNIs 5010 and 5020 to interface 1/1/3 on Switch-2.
AtubaOS-CX switches are acting as Virtual Extensible LAN (VXLAN) Tunnel Endpoints (VTEPs) WITHOUT Ethernet VPN (EVPN).
Does this correctly describe how the VTEPs handle VXLAN traffic forwarding?
Solution:VTEPs that use headend replication forward unicasts with unknown destination MAC addresses as unicast packets to each VTEP in the same VNl.
Does this correctly describe routing information advertised by a VXLAN Tunnel Endpomt (VTEP) that uses EVPN?
Solution:IMET routes advertise the MAC addresses that the VTEP has learned locally in a VXLAN.