what will be the source physical address when the packe…

In the diagram below, if the workstation at 10.0.1.3 sends a packet to the workstation at 10.1.1.3, what will be
the source physical address when the packet arrives at 10.1.1.3?

In the diagram below, if the workstation at 10.0.1.3 sends a packet to the workstation at 10.1.1.3, what will be
the source physical address when the packet arrives at 10.1.1.3?

A.
ab.ab.ab.ab.ab.ab

B.
ee.ee.ee.ee.ee.ee

C.
dd.dd.dd.dd.dd.dd

D.
cc.cc.cc.cc.cc.cc

E.
aa.aa.aa.aa.aa.aa

F.
bb.bb.bb.bb.bb.bb

Explanation:
The source physical address of the packet when it arrives at 10.1.1.3 will be that of the interface on the R2
router, dd.dd.dd.dd.dd.dd . Each router will change the MAC address field to the MAC address of its sending
interface as it sends the packet and will leave the IP address field unchanged. The switches will change neither
field, but will simply use the MAC address field to determine the forwarding path and switch the frame to the
port where the MAC address is located. The R2 router is the last device that will make a change to the MAC
address field.
The source (10.0.1.3) and destination (10.1.1.3) IP address fields will stay the same at each device. The MAC
address field changes when R1 sends the frame to R2 and when R2 send the frame to the workstation at
10.1.1.3.
Objective:
LAN Switching Fundamentals
Sub-Objective:
Describe and verify switching concepts

Cisco > IOS Technology Handbook > Routing Basics



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