— Exhibit —
user@router> show route
inet.0: 9 destinations, 9 routes (9 active, 0 holddown, 0 hidden)
+ = Active Route, – = Last Active, * = Both
10.10.10.91/32 *[Direct/0] 00:09:40
> via lo0.0
10.10.10.92/32 *[OSPF/10] 00:01:50, metric 1
> to 172.16.1.2 via ge-0/0/2.0
100.100.1.0/24 *[Static/5] 00:01:50
Reject
172.16.1.0/24 *[Direct/0] 00:06:09
> via ge-0/0/2.0
172.16.1.1/32 *[Local/0] 00:06:09
Local via ge-0/0/2.0
192.168.0.0/16 *[Aggregate/130] 00:00:06
Reject
192.168.0.0/17 *[Aggregate/130] 00:00:06
> to 172.16.1.2 via ge-0/0/2.0
192.168.50.0/24 *[Static/5] 00:00:06
> to 172.16.1.2 via ge-0/0/2.0
192.168.51.0/24 *[Static/5] 00:00:06
> to 172.16.1.2 via ge-0/0/2.0
user@router> show configuration policy-options
policy-statement demo {
term 1 {
from {
protocol static;
route-filter 192.168.0.0/16 orlonger accept;
}
then accept;
}}
user@router> show configuration protocols ospf
export demo;
area 0.0.0.0 {
interface ge-0/0/2.0;
}
— Exhibit —
Given the configuration and routing table shown in the exhibit, which routes will be
advertised to OSPF neighbors because of the demo policy?
A.
192.168.0.0/16 only
B.
192.168.50.0/24 only
C.
192.168.50.0/24 and 192.168.51.0/24
D.
192.168.0.0/17, 192.168.50.0/24, and 192.168.51.0/24
“It was tricksy, precious. Very tricksy.” – Gollum
https://learningportal.juniper.net/juniper/user_fasttrack_study.aspx?track=Fast+Track+JNCIA-JUNOS
JNCIA-Junos Study Guide—Part 2
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