What is causing the problem?

Your network engineering department has decided another SRX cluster is needed for additional capacity and DMZ segments. After installing the new cluster on the same VLANs, network segment customers are reporting intermittent loss of service. Upon investigating the problem, you have confirmed that there are no IP address conflicts.

What is causing the problem?

Your network engineering department has decided another SRX cluster is needed for additional capacity and DMZ segments. After installing the new cluster on the same VLANs, network segment customers are reporting intermittent loss of service. Upon investigating the problem, you have confirmed that there are no IP address conflicts.

What is causing the problem?

A.
The two SRX clusters are competing for primary RE1 status and the traffic keeps failing over between the two clusters.

B.
The two SRX clusters have been configured with matching cluster IDs and as a result have conflicting MAC addresses.

C.
The two SRX clusters are flooding the network with gratuitous ARPs and overloading the directly connected switches.

D.
The two SRX clusters are competing for primary REO status and traffic keeps failing over between the two clusters.



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seenagape

seenagape

I have the same idea. B