Refer to the exhibit. Why is the 140.140.0.0 network not used as the gateway of last resort
even though it is configured first? Select the bestresponse.
R3#show run | include defaultip default-network 140.140.0.0
ip default-network 130.130.0.0
R3#show ip route | begin Gateway
Gateway of last resort is 0.0.0.0 to network 130.130.0.0
116.0.0.0/8 is variably subnetted, 5 subnets, 3 masks
C 116.16.37.0/30 is directly connected, Serial1/0.2
C 116.16.32.0/30 is directly connected, Serial2/0.2
C 116.16.34.0/28 is directly connected, Serial1/0.1
C 116.16.35.0/28 is directly connected, Serial2/0.1
S 116.0.0.0/8 [1/0] via 116.16.34.0
* 140.140.0.0/32 is subnetted, 3 subnets
O 140.140.1.1 [110/65] via 116.16.34.4, 00:14:54, Serial1/0.1
O 140.140.3.1 [110/65] via 116.16.34.4, 00:14:54, Serial1/0.1
O 140.140.2.1 [110/65] via 116.16.34.4, 00:14:54, Serial1/0.1
* 130.130.0.0/16 is variably subnetted, 4 subnets, 2 masks
D* 130.130.0.0/16 is a summary, 00:30:04, Null0
C 130.130.1.0/24 is directly connected, Ethernet0/0
C 130.130.2.0/24 is directly connected, Ethernet0/1
C 130.130.3.0/24 is directly connected, Ethernet1/0
D 150.150.0.0/16 [90/679936] via 116.16.35.5, 00:02:58,
Serial2/0.1
A.
The last default-network statement will always be preferred.
B.
A route to the 140.140.0.0 network does not exist in the routing table.
C.
Default-network selection will always prefer the statement with the lowest IP address.
D.
A router will load balance across multiple default-networks; repeatedly issuing the show
ip route command would show the gateway of last resort changing between the two
networks.