AtubaOS-CX switches are acting as Virtual Extensible LAN (VXLAN) Tunnel Endpoints (VTEPs) WITHOUT Ethernet VPN (EVPN).
Does this correctly describe how the VTEPs handle VXLAN traffic forwarding?
Solution: VTEPs that use headend replication forward broadcast as multicast to each VTEP in the same VNI.
Refer to the exhibit.
which shows the topology tot an Ethernet Ring Protection Switching (ERPS) solution.
Is this a valid design for the control and protected VLANs on the VSX fabric 1 switches?
Solution: Ring 1, instance 1:
control VLAN: 1000protected VLANs: 51-135 Ring l,Instance2:
control VLAN: 1001 protected VLANs: 136-220 Ring 2, Instance 1: control VLAN: 1000 protected VLANs: 181 -200 Ring 2, Instance 2: control VLAN: 1003 protected VLANs: 201 -220
Refer to the exhibit.
You are adding a VLAN 30, subnet 10.0.30.0/24 to the network shown in the exhibit. (This network is simplified to just the relevant switches for this item.) This subnet belongs in VRF A, and you have added a Layer 3 VLAN 30 interface attached to this VRF on Switch-1. You want to make the services in this VLAN available to devices in 10.1.20.0/24 in VRF B.
Is this part of a valid setup for meeting these requirements?
Solution: Add a route with this command: ip route 10.1.20.0/24 vlan20 vrf A
Is this a best practice when positioning ArubaOS-CX switches in data center networks?
Solution: Deploy Aruba CX 83xx switches as data center spine switches.
Is this statement about ARP and ND Suppression true?
Solution: Both ARP-Suppression and ND-Suppression are disabled by default.