PT Final
PT Final
PT Final
Introduction to Networks
Introduction
In this assessment, you will configure devices in an IPv4/IPv6 network. For the
sake of time, you will not be asked to perform all configurations on all network
devices as you may be required to do in a real network or other assessment.
Instead, you will use the skills and knowledge that you have learned in the labs
in this course to configure the Building 1 router. In addition, you will address the
hosts on two LANs with IPv4 and IPv6 addresses, activate and address the
management interface of the Second Floor Switch, and back up a device
configuration to a TFTP server.
You will receive one of several topologies.
You are not required to configure the First Floor Switch, and you will not
be able to access it in this practice skills assessment activity.
All IOS device configurations should be completed from a direct terminal
connection to the device console. In addition, many values that are
required to complete the configurations have not been given to you. In
those cases, create the values that you need to complete the
requirements. For values that have been supplied to you, they must be
entered exactly as they appear in order for you to get full credit for your
configuration.
You will practice and be assessed on the following skills:
IPv6 addressing
Addressing Table
IPv4
Address
Devic Interfa
e
ce
IPv4
Subnet Default
Mask Gatewa
y
IPv6 Address
IPv6
Default
Gatewa
y
N/A
G0/0
Buildin
g1
2001:DB8:ACAD:A::1
/64
N/A
N/A
G0/1
Link
Local
Secon
d
Vlan 1
Floor
Switch
2001:DB8:ACAD:B::1
/64
N/A
FE80::1
N/A
N/A
N/A
Host 1
NIC
2001:DB8:ACAD:A::F
F
Host 2
NIC
2001:DB8:ACAD:A::1
5
Host 3
NIC
2001:DB8:ACAD:B::F
F
N/A
TFTP
Server
NIC
2001:DB8:ACAD:B::1
5
Instructions
Step 1: Determine the IP Addressing Scheme.
Design an IPv4 addressing scheme and complete the Addressing Table based
on the following requirements. Use the table to help you organize your work.
Subnet
Ending
Beginning
Numbe
Addres
Address
r
s
1
Mask
Assignmen
t
192.168.1.
0
2
3
4
First Floor
LAN Subnet
5
6
Second
Floor LAN
Subnet
new subnets will provide 14 host addresses per subnet while wasting
the fewest addresses.
e. Assign the second of these new 14-host subnets to the Second
Floor LAN.
f. Assign the last network host address (the highest) in the Second
Floor LAN subnet to the G0/1 interface of the Building 1 router.
g. Assign the second to the last address (the second highest) in this
subnet to the VLAN 1 interface of the Second Floor Switch.
h. Configure addresses on the hosts using any of the remaining
addresses in their respective subnets.
Step 2: Configure the Building 1 Router.
a. Configure the Building 1 router with all initial configurations that you
have learned in the course so far:
Configure the router hostname: Middle
Protect device configurations from unauthorized access
with the encrypted privileged exec password.
Secure all access lines into the router using methods
covered in the course and labs.
Require newly-entered passwords must have a minimum
length of 10 characters.
Prevent all passwords from being viewed in clear text in
device configuration files.
Configure the router to only accept in-band management
connections over the protocol that is more secure than
Telnet, as was done in the labs. Use the value 1024 for
encryption key strength.
a. Use the IPv4 addressing from Step 1 and the IPv6 addressing
values provided in the addressing table to configure all host PCs with
the correct addressing.
b. Use the router interface link-local address as the IPv6 default
gateways on the hosts.
Step 5: Backup the Configuration of the Building 1 Router to TFTP.
Version 2.1.1
Created in Packet Tracer 6.1 and Marvel 2.0.5
All contents are Copyright 1992 - 2014 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights
reserved. This document is Cisco Public Information.
Table of Contents
General Information
Feedback Section
Scoring
General Information
Assessment = NB_ITN Practice Skills Assessment - PT
Form = English FormB ITN Practice Skills Assessment - PT
User ID =
Scored Date = Tue Apr 28 15:26:16 GMT+00:00 2015
The time shown is Greenwich Mean Time (GMT). Subtract or add the appropriate number of hours to
adjust to your local time. If you do not know the correct number of hours to adjust to GMT,
visithttp://www.timeanddate.com/worldclock/search.html.
Feedback
Based on your performance on this assessment, this table reports your preparedness for taking a handson skills exam covering similar networking skills. The estimates are based on expert opinion of the
knowledge and skills needed to successfully perform these networking tasks on a repeatable basis.
Performance Components
Proficiency Estimates
None
IP Addressing Design
Novice
Partial
Proficient
Device Hardening
You have correctly configured all of the default gateways on the hosts.
Scoring
Total Points Possible = 100
Total Earned Points = 94
C
C
C
C
C
C
C
C
Terminology
Performance Component - a description of what the student knows and can do about a coherent set of
networking knowledge and skills; the level at which the student's work product can be assigned a
proficiency estimate.
Proficiency Estimate - a description of a student's level of mastery of the performance component. The
proficiency estimate is not meant to be a comprehensive statement of what the student knows and can do.
Work Product - student performance recorded during this assessment. For example, the submitted
activity file, timing statistics, and final running configurations.
Work Product Feature - An aspect of the student's work product. The feature can have a name and a
value. For example, Name = FastEthernet0/0:IP Address; Value = 192.168.1.1
Individual work product features are combined into performance components and scored based on the
complexity of the performance observed. Because the construction of performance components is based
on the underlying work product features as well as the unique design of each scenario, strict boundaries
for determining a proficiency rating are not possible. In general: