Answer: A
Explanation Passive clients are wireless devices, such as scales and printers that are configured with a static
IP address. These clients do not transmit any IP information such as IP address, subnet mask, and
gateway information when they associate with an access point. As a result, when passive clients
are used, the controller never knows the IP address unless they use the DHCP.
Since the wireless controller does not have any IP related information about passive clients, it
cannot respond to any ARP requests. The current behavior does not allow the transfer of ARP
requests to passive clients. Any application that tries to access a passive client will fail.
The
passive client feature enables the ARP requests and responses to be exchanged between wired and wireless clients . This feature when enabled, allows the controller to pass ARP
requests from wired to wireless clients until the desired wireless client gets to the RUN state.
Reference:
https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/td/docs/wireless/controller/7-6/configuration-
guide/b_cg76/b_cg76_chapter_01100000.pdf
Question 61 An engineer is configuring router R1 with an IPv6 static route for prefix
2019:C15C:0CAF:E001::/64. The next hop must be 2019:C15C:0CAF:E002::1 The route must
be reachable via the R1 Gigabit 0/0 interface. Which command configures the designated route?
A. R1(config)#ipv6 route 2019:C15C:0CAF:E001::/64 2019:C15C:0CAF:E002::1
B. R1(config-if)#ipv6 route 2019:C15C:0CAF:E001::/64 2019:C15C:0CAF:E002::1
C. R1(config-if)#ip route 2019:C15C:0CAF:E001::/64 GigabitEthernet0/0
D. R1(config)#ip route 2019:C15C:0CAF:E001::/64 GigabitEthernet0/0
Answer: A
Question 62 Refer to the exhibit. What must be configured to enable 802.11w on the WLAN?