The number 2 is the autonomous system number.
That would depend on the router.
To connect the router boxes, use the Asus router.
To route a packet, usually an IP packet, a router compares the destination address to its (the router's) routing table. The router can get entries (rows) in its routing table in three different ways: (1) directly connected networks; (2) static routes (the route was configured manually by an administrator); (3) dynamic routes (the router learned available routes from a neighboring router, using a routing protocol such as RIP or OSPF).
I sold it. Answer 2: You can use the modem, so there is no need router to access the internet network. But router is just allow one user, router can support multi-users.
A single router, with 2 interfaces, is sufficient.
A(config)# router rip A(config-router)# passive-interface S0/0 B(config)# router rip B(config-router)# network 192.168.25.48 B(config-router)# network 192.168.25.64 A(config)# router rip A(config-router)# no network 192.168.25.32 B(config)# router rip B(config-router)# passive-interface S0/0 A(config)# no router rip
Yes. A router will de-capsulate an frame to verify it was destined for itself. Frames are layer 2.
Yes, you can.
on the engine block the order from the back to the front is 4321 but you will plug them in to the router like this. As the far left is 4 and the far right is 1. So from 4 on the engine to 4 on the router, from 3 to 3 on the router, then it switches from 2 on the engine to 1 on the router and finally from 1 on the engine to 2 on the router. So the router order should be 4312. Hope this will help
1.The router will discard the packet. 2.The router will send a time exceeded message to the source host.
Run them both together using lan cables into the router.
IT is depend on the medium even you can add 2 system in the end of the world via only a router.