Which of the following settings do not prevent two potential OSPF neighbors from becoming
neighbors?
A.
The interface used to connect to that neighbor being passive in the OSPF process
B.
Duplicate OSPF router IDs
C.
Mismatched dead timers
D.
IP addresses of 10.1.1.1/24 and 10.2.2.2/24
E.
Mismatched OSPF process IDs
Explanation:
For OSPF, Router IDs must be unique; the interfaces must not be passive; the dead timers
must match; and the primary IP addresses must be in the same subnet, with the same
subnet mask. However, the process
IDs, found on the router ospf process-id command, do not have to matcH.