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Arista Exam ACE-A1.2 Topic 5 Question 67 Discussion

Actual exam question for Arista's ACE-A1.2 exam
Question #: 67
Topic #: 5
[All ACE-A1.2 Questions]

What would be the result of issuing a reload command on one of the two switches peered together in an MLAG domain where both switches are running EOS version 4.14.1F?

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: B

Contribute your Thoughts:

Alfred
2 months ago
I'm going with A. Losing 50% of network capacity sounds like a nightmare, but it's better than the peer switch rebooting and taking down the whole network, right?
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Gladis
2 days ago
C) The peer switch sends out gratuitous BPDUs to maintain network stability.
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Tamala
3 days ago
A) Losing network capacity is manageable compared to a network-wide reboot.
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Levi
6 days ago
B) The peer switch also reboots to ensure network stability.
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Raelene
7 days ago
A) Dual-homed hosts lose 50% of network capacity through the MLAG domain while the switch reboots
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Mayra
21 days ago
C) The peer switch sends out gratuitous BPDUs to let the network know that it has assumed the root-bridge role.
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Marisha
22 days ago
A) Losing 50% of network capacity sounds like a nightmare, but it's better than the peer switch rebooting and taking down the whole network, right?
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Alaine
2 months ago
B) The peer switch also reboots to ensure network stability.
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Nell
2 months ago
A) Dual-homed hosts lose 50% of network capacity through the MLAG domain while the switch reboots
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Daniela
2 months ago
Haha, D for sure! MLAG is like a magic bullet for network problems. We should just enable it and forget about it. What could possibly go wrong?
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Mary
2 months ago
I'm not sure, but I think the answer might be C. The peer switch sends out gratuitous BPDUs to let the network know that it has assumed the root-bridge role.
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Dallas
2 months ago
I don't know, man. These MLAG questions always confuse me. Maybe D is the right answer - nothing bad ever happens with MLAG, right? That's what the marketing says, at least.
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Veronika
1 months ago
User 2: I'm not so sure about that. Maybe the peer switch also reboots to ensure network stability.
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Lajuana
1 months ago
User 1: I think D is the right answer. Nothing bad ever happens with MLAG, right?
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Hannah
2 months ago
I agree with Sunshine. It makes sense for both switches to reboot to maintain network stability.
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Sunshine
2 months ago
I think the answer is B. The peer switch also reboots to ensure network stability.
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Stanton
2 months ago
I'm pretty sure the correct answer is B. When one MLAG switch reboots, the peer also reboots to ensure network stability. I've seen this happen in production before.
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Almeta
1 months ago
Definitely, it's a key feature of MLAG to maintain network reliability during switch reboots.
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Timothy
2 months ago
I've experienced this firsthand, it's a necessary step to prevent network disruptions.
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Carolynn
2 months ago
That makes sense, it's important for both switches to stay synchronized in an MLAG setup.
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Corrinne
2 months ago
I agree, the correct answer is B. The peer switch also reboots to ensure network stability.
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