What John describes as a Level 1 route Cisco describes as a Parent route. And what the instructor describes as an Ultimate route Cisco describes as an Level 1 route?
@Kurio71 And a Level 1 route that *does* contain a next-hop IP address or exit interface is one example of an ultimate route, per Cisco Netacad. This contradicts what John says in his video.
I dont get it. If there are 2 networks and a given ip address fits into both and is unique, how does it the packet get there?
orbital92hotmail 1 month ago
From what I'm learning about the company, Cisco, I'm tempted to believe the confusion in terminology is intentional and somehow makes them money.
Pooua 7 months ago
What John at Cisco calls an ultimate route is what Cisco Netacad calls a Level 1 route.
Pooua 7 months ago
@Pooua thanks for the reply, given networking a rest at the moment.
Kurio71 7 months ago
@Kurio71 I'm taking CCNA 2 right now. Finals are this week, and I'm trying to cram in all I can.
Pooua 7 months ago
@Pooua Did mine bout a year ago. Didn't go on to CCNA3. Forgotten most of what I learnt.
Kurio71 7 months ago
What John describes as a Level 1 route Cisco describes as a Parent route. And what the instructor describes as an Ultimate route Cisco describes as an Level 1 route?
Kurio71 1 year ago
A level 1 parent route is a network route that does not contain a next-hop IP address or exit interface for any network
Kurio71 1 year ago
@Kurio71 And a Level 1 route that *does* contain a next-hop IP address or exit interface is one example of an ultimate route, per Cisco Netacad. This contradicts what John says in his video.
Pooua 7 months ago
Cont.part 3
A level 2 route is a route that is a subnet of a classful network address.
Level 2 child routes are also considered ultimate routes because they will contain the next-hop IP address and/or exit interface.
An ultimate route is a route that includes: either a next-hop IP address (another path) and/or an exit interface.
A level 1 route can be further defined as an ultimate route if it has either a next-hop IP address and/or an exit interface.
Kurio71 1 year ago
Comment removed
Kurio71 1 year ago
The instructor's definitions (1:00 to 2:10) of routing entry types differ from what Cisco defines them from Cisco Netacad.
From the course material
A level 1 route is a route with a subnet mask equal to or less than the classful mask of the network address.
A level 1 route can function as a:
Default route , Network route or a Supernet route.
Kurio71 1 year ago
very good, sounds like you have a clear teaching approach, post more video,s
munemo 1 year ago
Hi there, Great Video!
worldclassleader 2 years ago