Refer to the exhibit. An organization connect two locations, supporting two VLANs, through two switches as shown. Inter-VLANs communicated is not required. The network is working properly and there is fully connectivity. The organization needs to add additional VLANs, so it has been decided to implement VTP. Both switches are configured as VTP servers in the same VTP domain. VLANs added to Switch1 are not learned by Switch2.
Based on this information and partial configuration is the exhibit, what is the problem?
A.
Switch2 should be configured as a VTP client.
B.
VTP is Cisco proprietory and requires a different trunking encapsulation
C.
A router is required to route VTP advertisements between the swtiches.
D.
STP has blocked on of the links between the switches, limiting connectivity.
E.
The links between the switches are access links.
A trunk link is a special connection; the key difference between an ordinary connection (access port) and a trunk port is that although an Access port is only in one VLAN at a time, a trunk port has the job of carrying traffic for all VLANs from one switch to another. Any time you connect a switch to another switch and want to make sure that all VLANs will be carried across the switches, you want to make it a trunk.
To carry on the data frames for all VLANs, you need to create the Trunk link on switch port as well as you need to select the encapsulation type.
switchport mode trunk
switchport trunk encapsulation dot1 q or isl
In the above topology the switches are connected on access ports. Making them trunk ports should solve this issue.
Correct answer is