A Cisco Catalyst switch connects with its Gigabit0/1 port to an end user’s PC. The end user, thinking the user is helping, manually sets the PC’s OS to use a speed of 1000 Mbps and to use full duplex, and disables the use of autonegotiation. The switch’s G0/1 port has default settings for speed and duplex. What speed and duplex settings will the switch decide to use? (Choose two answers.)

IT Questions BankCategory: CCNAA Cisco Catalyst switch connects with its Gigabit0/1 port to an end user’s PC. The end user, thinking the user is helping, manually sets the PC’s OS to use a speed of 1000 Mbps and to use full duplex, and disables the use of autonegotiation. The switch’s G0/1 port has default settings for speed and duplex. What speed and duplex settings will the switch decide to use? (Choose two answers.)

A Cisco Catalyst switch connects with its Gigabit0/1 port to an end user’s PC. The end user, thinking the user is helping, manually sets the PC’s OS to use a speed of 1000 Mbps and to use full duplex, and disables the use of autonegotiation. The switch’s G0/1 port has default settings for speed and duplex. What speed and duplex settings will the switch decide to use? (Choose two answers.)

  • Full duplex
  • Half duplex
  • 10 Mbps
  • 1000 Mbps

Explanation: The IEEE autonegotiation rules dictate that if a device attempts autonegotiation but the other side does not participate, use the slowest speed it supports.
However, Cisco switches override that logic, instead sampling the electrical signal to detect the speed used by the connected device, so the switch will operate at 1000 Mbps. The switch uses the IEEE default setting for duplex based on the speed, and the IEEE default for duplex when using 1000 Mbps is to use full duplex. So in this case, the switch will match both the speed and the duplex setting made on the PC.

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