Which of the following is a network device that is responsible for separating collision domains

© 2022 ExamTopics

ExamTopics doesn't offer Real Microsoft Exam Questions. ExamTopics doesn't offer Real Amazon Exam Questions. ExamTopics Materials do not contain actual questions and answers from Cisco's Certification Exams.

CFA Institute does not endorse, promote or warrant the accuracy or quality of ExamTopics. CFA® and Chartered Financial Analyst® are registered trademarks owned by CFA Institute.

© 2022 - Free Practice Exam Collection - www.freecram.net | DMCA

Disclaimer:
www.freecram.net doesn't offer Real GIAC Exam Questions.
www.freecram.net doesn't offer Real SAP Exam Questions.
www.freecram.net doesn't offer Real (ISC)² Exam Questions.
www.freecram.net doesn't offer Real CompTIA Exam Questions.
Oracle and Java are registered trademarks of Oracle and/or its affiliates
www.freecram.net material do not contain actual actual Oracle Exam Questions or material.
www.freecram.net doesn't offer Real Microsoft Exam Questions.
Microsoft®, Azure®, Windows®, Windows Vista®, and the Windows logo are registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation
www.freecram.net Materials do not contain actual questions and answers from Cisco's Certification Exams. The brand Cisco is a registered trademark of CISCO, Inc
CFA Institute does not endorse, promote or warrant the accuracy or quality of these questions. CFA® and Chartered Financial Analyst® are registered trademarks owned by CFA Institute.
www.freecram.net does not offer exam dumps or questions from actual exams. We offer learning material and practice tests created by subject matter experts to assist and help learners prepare for those exams. All certification brands used on the website are owned by the respective brand owners. www.freecram.net does not own or claim any ownership on any of the brands.

Which of the following network devices is used to separate collision domains?

Bridges. Bridges area is a Layer 2 device that separates collision domains by determining what MAC addresses are on each side of the bridge and only passing traffic if the destination address is on the other side of the bridge.

How are collision domains separated?

The packets collide and both devices must send the packets again, which reduces network efficiency. Collisions are often in a hub environment, because each port on a hub is in the same collision domain. By contrast, each port on a bridge, a switch or a router is in a separate collision domain.

What network device is considered as a collision domain?

Each interface on a switch is considered a collision domain. Switch interfaces run in full duplex, we can transmit and receive at the same time. No collisions occur in a switched network unless you have defective interfaces or network cards.

Which device create separate collision domains in a single broadcast domain?

Which device creates separate collision domains and a single broadcast domain? Switches create separate collision domains but a single broadcast domain. Remember that routers provide a separate broadcast domain for each interface.