@@Lmoro00 Correct me if im wrong, the ip address has a range, and that workstation's IP falls in that range since the workstation is 192.168.0.82 and the ACL's starting range for that IP address is 192.168.0.80 and that rule is denying communication to anything for ip addresses that fall under that rule.
Actively working on A+ right now but wanted to give this a try. Got 2/4 on my first go round then found this video. I guess I'm confused because the defective machine's IP ended in .82 but you removed the denial for a source IP that ended in .80 -- can someone explain this to me? Does the last digit not matter?
@@samgonzalez1447 why did he cancel off the number 5 on the ACL. can explain to me the rationale? Because im trying to figure out the reason for doing so
@@mohdfadhlirazeli7524 I have a vague idea of why, so the ip address has a range, and that workstation's IP falls in that range since the workstation is 192.168.0.82 and the ACL's starting range for that kind of IP address is 192.168.0.80 and that rule is denying communication to anything for ip addresses that fall under that rule. ex: starting range to deny traffic will be 1. the ending range is 5. the numberd we are dealing with is 1 2 5. the workstation's number is 2 which falls under that rule.
i wasn't pushin' P 🎲
This was an amazing tutorial. Thank you and keep them coming.
very nice, thanks for sharing
Had exact one on test last week
You got this PBQ on the Net+ exam?
Yes exact one . But everytime test changes, they have big bank of questions .
Problem is comptia never give result n show which ones are wrong
@@Lmoro00 Correct me if im wrong, the ip address has a range, and that workstation's IP falls in that range since the workstation is 192.168.0.82 and the ACL's starting range for that IP address is 192.168.0.80 and that rule is denying communication to anything for ip addresses that fall under that rule.
Thank you!!! Doing network+ tomorrow :))
Actively working on A+ right now but wanted to give this a try. Got 2/4 on my first go round then found this video. I guess I'm confused because the defective machine's IP ended in .82 but you removed the denial for a source IP that ended in .80 -- can someone explain this to me? Does the last digit not matter?
i believe thats because .82 is in the subnet of .80
But you don't explain why...
I get only a score of 2 out of 4 for some reason
I understand it , thanks alot bro !! I though it was the defaul gateway misconfigured but was the ACL
How many performance based question does casp+ haves ?
Thanks a lot man! New subscriber ✌🏻
This is great 👍 simulation learning
can u please explain why he cancel that deny?
@@mohdfadhlirazeli7524 what do you mean he cancelled that deny?
@@samgonzalez1447 why did he cancel off the number 5 on the ACL. can explain to me the rationale? Because im trying to figure out the reason for doing so
@@mohdfadhlirazeli7524 Also.. how did he know 192.168.0.80/28 was the address to Deny? It seemed like he guessed
@@mohdfadhlirazeli7524 I have a vague idea of why, so the ip address has a range, and that workstation's IP falls in that range since the workstation is 192.168.0.82 and the ACL's starting range for that kind of IP address is 192.168.0.80 and that rule is denying communication to anything for ip addresses that fall under that rule. ex: starting range to deny traffic will be 1. the ending range is 5. the numberd we are dealing with is 1 2 5. the workstation's number is 2 which falls under that rule.
Guy, u suppose do plenty videos on pbq
ah, this makes so much sense!
thank you soo much!
You ARE A LIFE- SAVER
I don't understand how you solved the problem, when you have time, could you explain how you did so.
@@jahzeeljohnson7739 i dont either?! the IP dosnt match! helpppppp
Thank you for the tutorial