answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

It will forward the packet to R1

User Avatar

Wiki User

12y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What action will R2 take for a packet that is destined for 192.168.2.0 It will drop the packet?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

What is promiscuous mode in Ethereal?

For a message to send out, it has to address which Mac address to send. If the message I received doesn't not match with my MAC address then my network interface will drop the packet completely. If your network is on promiscuous mode, then your network interface will not drop the message. It is good for packet sniffing. I hope this helps.


What is the meaning of dropped?

of Drop, The action of causing to drop or of letting drop; falling., That which falls in drops; the excrement or dung of animals.


When you drop a ball what is the action force on the ball?

Gravity


What is the name of something that sucks up water and when you squeeze the end it comes out drop by drop?

peristaltic action


How are amphibians eggs fertilized?

Amphibians have an external fertilisation, the males drop a sperm-packet wich the females inserts into their cloaca as in salamanders. Female frogs produce eggs and drop the eggmass into the water where they are fertilized by the male.


How many elephants live in Virunga?

There are three hundred and fifty elephants living in Virunga at this present time. But the population is destined to drop as Africa has ended the ban on poaching elephants.


What happened when you drop an ink into a cloth?

Capillary action causes it to spread.


Rugby action that might result in three points?

Drop goal and penalty kck.


What is the basic difference between electric spark and electric arc?

the time it duration for the action and voltage drop


Describe 4 different scenarios when an ip router would drop packets that arrive on one of its interfaces?

1) ACL (Access Control List) policy instructs the router to drop it. This is a "rule" configured intentionally by the router's administrator to control traffic. 2) The packed fails an RPF (Reverse Path Forwarding) check. This is when a packet arrives with a source address that doesn't make sense, and it appears like an attempt at malicious activity. 3) The input queue is full. This is basically a symptom of the router being overloaded. 4) The packet fails a basic sanity check, such as TTL (Time to Live) expiring, or failing a CRC (Cyclic Redundancy Check), although that is actually a Layer 2 function, not IP. 5) The packet has a requirement that the router is unable to accomodate. Examples of this would be a non-UDP encapsulated IPSec packet whos destination address requires translation, or a multicast packet arriving at a router that is not configured for multicast routing.


If a node receives a frame and the calculated crc does not mach the crc in the fcs what action will the nod take?

It will drop the frame


How does affirmative action hurt white people?

Minorities have a hard time competing with their classmates. They are more likely to drop out of school. Also, Affirmative Action devalues achievements of minorities.