mediummultiple choiceObjective-mapped

A technician is setting up a small office network with a managed switch, a router (192.168.1.1/24), and 20 workstations. All workstations are connected to the switch and configured with static IPs in the range 192.168.1.2-192.168.1.21, subnet mask 255.255.255.0, default gateway 192.168.1.1. All workstations can ping the router successfully, but some workstations cannot ping each other. Which of the following is the MOST likely cause?

Question 1mediummultiple choice
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A technician is setting up a small office network with a managed switch, a router (192.168.1.1/24), and 20 workstations. All workstations are connected to the switch and configured with static IPs in the range 192.168.1.2-192.168.1.21, subnet mask 255.255.255.0, default gateway 192.168.1.1. All workstations can ping the router successfully, but some workstations cannot ping each other. Which of the following is the MOST likely cause?

Answer choices

Why each option matters

Good practice is not just finding the correct option. The wrong answers often show the exact trap the exam wants you to fall into.

A

Best answer

A

The switch ports are configured in different VLANs: VLANs separate broadcast domains. Workstations in different VLANs cannot communicate directly at Layer 2, even if they share the same IP subnet. The router can reach each VLAN, but direct workstation-to-workstation pings fail.

B

Distractor review

B

Default gateway is misconfigured: The default gateway is used to reach networks outside the local subnet. Since all workstations can ping the router, the gateway setting is correct. This would not prevent pings between workstations on the same subnet.

C

Distractor review

C

DNS server failure: DNS resolves hostnames to IP addresses, but pinging by IP address does not require DNS. A DNS failure would not affect direct IP-based pings between workstations.

D

Distractor review

D

The router is performing NAT: NAT translates private IPs to public IPs for internet access. It has no effect on local, same-subnet communication between workstations.

Common exam trap

Common exam trap: an active trunk can still block the VLAN you need

A trunk being up does not prove every VLAN is crossing it. Check allowed VLAN lists, native VLAN mismatch, VLAN existence and access-port assignment.

Technical deep dive

How to think about this question

VLAN questions usually combine access-port and trunking clues. The key is to identify whether the issue is local to one switchport, caused by the trunk, or caused by the VLAN not existing where it needs to exist.

KKey Concepts to Remember

  • Access ports place end devices into a single VLAN.
  • Trunk ports carry multiple VLANs between switches.
  • Allowed VLAN lists decide which VLANs can cross a trunk.
  • Native VLAN mismatch can create confusing symptoms.

TExam Day Tips

  • Use show vlan brief to verify access VLANs.
  • Use show interfaces trunk to verify trunk state and allowed VLANs.
  • Do not treat every same-VLAN issue as a routing problem.

Related practice questions

Related 220-1101 practice-question pages

Use these pages to review the topic behind this question. This is how one missed question becomes focused revision.

More questions from this exam

Keep practising from the same exam bank, or move into a focused topic page if this question exposed a weak area.

Question 1

A user reports intermittent network connectivity on a desktop computer. The technician observes that the Ethernet link light on the NIC turns off for a few seconds and then turns back on. The cable passes a wiremap test, the switch port is verified good with another device, and the NIC driver is updated. The issue occurs more frequently when the computer's case fan runs at high speed. Which of the following is the MOST likely cause?

Question 2

A workstation is unable to connect to the internet. The technician runs the 'ipconfig' command and sees the IPv4 address is 169.254.15.200 with a subnet mask of 255.255.0.0. The workstation can ping other devices on the local subnet but cannot ping the default gateway or any external addresses. Which TWO actions should the technician take to resolve this issue? (Select two.)

Question 3

A workstation is connected to a managed switch. It obtains a valid IP address (192.168.10.50) from the DHCP server, but it cannot ping the default gateway (192.168.10.1). The link light on both the workstation NIC and the switch port are solid green. Other workstations on the same switch CAN ping the default gateway successfully. The technician accesses the switch management interface and finds that the workstation's port is configured as an access port on VLAN 10. The default gateway is located on VLAN 20. An inter-VLAN router is configured but not explicitly allowing VLAN 10 access to VLAN 20. Which of the following is the MOST likely cause of the problem?

Question 4

A company develops a web application that relies on a custom library available only for a specific Linux distribution. They want to deploy the application in the cloud with minimal administrative overhead, but they need full control over the software stack, including the ability to install the custom library and configure the web server. Which cloud service model BEST meets these requirements?

Question 5

A company has a legacy virtual machine running on a deprecated hypervisor (Hyper-V). They want to migrate this VM to a new hypervisor (VMware vSphere) hosted in a private cloud while preserving the VM's configuration, installed applications, and data. The migration must be performed with minimal downtime. Which of the following methods is MOST appropriate?

Question 6

A company hosts a critical database on a virtual machine in a public cloud. The database requires persistent storage that must be retained even if the VM is terminated. The storage must also be accessible from multiple VMs simultaneously for a future high-availability configuration. Which type of cloud storage BEST meets these requirements?

FAQ

Questions learners often ask

What does this 220-1101 question test?

Access ports place end devices into a single VLAN.

What is the correct answer to this question?

The correct answer is: A — Even though all workstations have IP addresses in the same subnet, if the managed switch has port-based VLANs configured, devices in different VLANs are isolated at Layer 2 and cannot communicate directly. They would need a router to route between VLANs (inter-VLAN routing). Since the router is reachable from all, it suggests the router is configured to handle multiple VLANs via subinterfaces or is connected to a trunk port. A misconfigured default gateway would affect communication to the router, not between local workstations. DNS is not required for IP-based pings. NAT is performed by the router for internet access, not for local communication.

What should I do if I get this 220-1101 question wrong?

Then try more questions from the same exam bank and focus on understanding why the wrong options are tempting.

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