i honestly don't recommend using ipcalc. for sure it's not a cisco exam, but some questions are very the same actually, like:
"how many available hosts in a subnet of 255.255.255.224?" be careful to use ipcalc, use it only to validate that what you did is correct. This is my suggestion. 2009/8/6 Jorge Armando Medina <[email protected]> > Andy Goldschmidt wrote: > > Do you have some examples of the types of calculations we need to make? > > > > (Note - please don't include ACTUAL exam questions) > > > > This is not a cisco exam :), but if you want to see some examples, take > a look at the exam emulation at: > http://www.linux-praxis.de/lpisim/lpi102sim/index.html > > it is a little outdated but still valid, when I see this topics, I > usually try to teach how to do simple binary calculations for classless > subnets. > > ipcalc is your frind: $ aptitude install ipcalc > > :) > > > > On Wed, 5 Aug 2009 13:41:03 -0300, Bruno Silva <[email protected]> > > wrote: > > > >> VLSM and CIDR are definitely included. > >> > >> > > > > > > > -- > Jorge Armando Medina > Computación Gráfica de México > Web: http://www.e-compugraf.com > Tel: 55 51 40 72, Ext: 124 > Email: [email protected] > GPG Key: 1024D/28E40632 2007-07-26 > GPG Fingerprint: 59E2 0C7C F128 B550 B3A6 D3AF C574 8422 28E4 0632 > > > > _______________________________________________ > lpi-examdev mailing list > [email protected] > http://list.lpi.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/lpi-examdev >
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