Which command was used to create the following configur…

Which command was used to create the following configuration?

Which command was used to create the following configuration?

A.
Router(config-router)# network 192.168.1.0 0.0.0.15

B.
Router(config-router)# network 192.168.1.0 255.255.255.0

C.
Router(config-router)# network 192.168.1.80
Router(config-router)# network 192.168.1.128

D.
Router(config-router)# network 192.168.1.0

Explanation:
The network 192.168.1.0 command instructs the router to activate EIGRP on every interface that belongs to the
class C network 192.168.1.0. The exhibit indicates that the router is running EIGRP on two subnets of
192.168.1.0 (192.168.1.80/28 and 192.168.1.128/28). Since both of these are subnets of the same class C
network number, only the class C address needs to be referenced with a network statement.
All interfaces that will participate in EIGRP must be specified with a network command that specifying the
network of which the interface is a member. Failure to do so will result in neighbor relationships not forming. In
the example below, Router A and Router B are directly connected, but not forming a neighbor relationship. The
network they share is the 192.168.5.0/24 network. The output of the show run command for both routers
reveals that Router B does not have EIGRP running on the 192.168.5.0 network.

The network 192.168.1.0 0.0.0.15 command is incorrect because only the class C network number
(192.168.1.0) needs to be referenced to enable EIGRP on all subnets. It is actually valid to include an inverse
mask with EIGRP network statements, but it is unnecessary in this case, and the network/mask provided does
not match either of the routed networks.
The network 192.168.1.0 255.255.255.0 command is incorrect because the mask is unnecessary in this case,
and if masks are included, they must be expressed inversely (0.0.0.255).
It is unnecessary to configure two network commands in this example, as both networks are subnets of the
same class C network (192.168.1.0), and a single network command can enable EIGRP on both. Additionally, if
specific subnets are referenced in network commands, it is necessary to include an inverse mask after them, or
EIGRP will automatically summarize the command to the classful boundary.
Objective:
Routing Fundamentals
Sub-Objective:
Configure, verify, and troubleshoot EIGRP for IPv4 (excluding authentication, filtering, manual summarization,
redistribution, stub)

Cisco > Cisco IOS IP Routing Protocols Configuration Guide, Release 12.4T > Part 3: EIGRP > Configuring
EIGR



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