What is the problem with this configuration?

You are establishing a ClusterXL environment, with the following topology: VIP internal cluster IP
= 172.16.10.3; VIP external cluster IP = 192.168.10.3 ClusterMember1:4NICs,3enabled: hme():
192.168.10.1/24, hmel: 10.10.10.1/24, qfe2: 172.16.10.1/24 Cluster Member 2: 5 NICs, 3 enabled;
hme3: 192.168.10.2/24, hmel: 10.10.10.2/24, hme2: 172.16.10.2/24 External interfaces
192.168.10.1 and 192.168.10.2 connect to a VLAN switch. The upstream router connects to the
same VLAN switch. Internal interfaces 172.16.10.1 and 172.16.10.2 connect to a hub. 10.10.10.0
is the synchronization network. The SmartCenter Server is located on the internal network with IP
172.16.10.3. What is the problem with this configuration?

You are establishing a ClusterXL environment, with the following topology: VIP internal cluster IP
= 172.16.10.3; VIP external cluster IP = 192.168.10.3 ClusterMember1:4NICs,3enabled: hme():
192.168.10.1/24, hmel: 10.10.10.1/24, qfe2: 172.16.10.1/24 Cluster Member 2: 5 NICs, 3 enabled;
hme3: 192.168.10.2/24, hmel: 10.10.10.2/24, hme2: 172.16.10.2/24 External interfaces
192.168.10.1 and 192.168.10.2 connect to a VLAN switch. The upstream router connects to the
same VLAN switch. Internal interfaces 172.16.10.1 and 172.16.10.2 connect to a hub. 10.10.10.0
is the synchronization network. The SmartCenter Server is located on the internal network with IP
172.16.10.3. What is the problem with this configuration?

A.
There is an IP address conflict.

B.
Cluster members cannot use the VLAN switch. They must use hubs.

C.
The Cluster interface names must be identical across all cluster members.

D.
The SmartCenter Server must be in the dedicated synchronization network, not the internal
network.

Explanation:



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