SysnetNotes wrote: » I moved to networking field from another industry.I know there are lot of experienced people in this forum.What are the common questions that can be expected in a CCNA level technical interview round.Also please share the difficult questions you experienced in real interviews. Hope this thread will help a lot of people like me
Zartanasaurus wrote: » Go up to the whiteboard and diagram your network for me.
Cat5 wrote: » I had a brain-freeze recently when I was asked "what does OSPF stand for?" I didn't get the job - I hope my mental lapse didn't cause it.
SysnetNotes wrote: » Below 3 questions was asked to one of my friend in a interview what is meant by UDLD ? Is that possible to use RIP in a network having more than 15 routers ? What is the difference between OSPF v2 and V3 ?
homemade88 wrote: » 1). What's the purpose of the Spanning Tree Protocol. 2). Explain NAT 3). What's the Differences between a switch and a router. 4). What's the purpose a VLANs 5). What's the purpose of using subnetting in a network Keep in mind however, that these questions weren't ask for an IP/Network Engineer position, It was for the position of Commercial Technical Engineer/PBX Technician (which I got by the way, yay me) so I left out all the Phone related questions.
smcclenaghan wrote: » 1. I never heard of UDLD until I just googled it.
OP wrote: Is that possible to use RIP in a network having more than 15 routers ?
smcclenaghan wrote: » 2. My answer would be as long as they weren't all in a row (and subnet 1 didn't need to traverse 2-15 to reach 16).
networker050184 wrote: » I always ask them to walk me through arp and how addresses change as a packet travels through a network. You'd be amazed by how many people with their CCNA/CCNP do not know the simple building blocks of networking. You may know how to type 'router ospf 1' all day long but if you can't figure out why something can't communicate at the lowest level you're useless.
Cyanic wrote: » Agreed, and since we mess around with applications too, I always ask them to explain TCP session creation, three way handshake. If they can correctly answer that, then I throw the trick question of explain how a TCP session is torn down. Yes I'm cruel.