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CISCO CCNA MAC ARP TABLE

Posted by mekichan on Thursday 16 April 2009 at 8:36 am



CISCO CCNA MAC ARP TABLE

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22 Comments »

  1. Comment by elpaisitadeoro — April 16, 2009 @ 9:34 pm

    PCs do not keep any kind of ARP cache. It broadcasts ARP requests everytime it wants to establish a connection.

  2. Comment by carnage123123123 — April 17, 2009 @ 6:34 am

    Okay, lets just leave it at the fact that it depends on which situation. There are other details to fill in, but the video is correct, you are as well. I never said anyone was wrong here did I?

  3. Comment by renos24 — April 20, 2009 @ 7:17 am

    anyway it seems you know some stuff what is your problem with this?
    it says : CISCO CCNA MAC ARP TABLE
    it doesnt say : cisco ccna full internetworking explanation.
    it is just i suppose a part of a tutorial so other stuff will be explained elsewere.
    or do you think cisco cant explain networking decently?

  4. Comment by renos24 — April 21, 2009 @ 1:23 pm

    if you just wanted to ping an IP and not a domain name , why you should send a dns request?
    this video cares about the NETWORKING part , not the application.

  5. Comment by carnage123123123 — April 22, 2009 @ 5:22 am

    The video assumes you know which computer name (you want to communicate with) has which IP because they’re on the same subnet and probably using static IP instead of DHCP since they’re using names (“A” or “B”) to signify who they want to talk too.

  6. Comment by carnage123123123 — April 24, 2009 @ 3:12 pm

    After it has gotten the IP then it can send out an ARP broadcast, get its MAC address to IP mapping and send out the frame (or send out a ICMP echo PING request)

    (in my first reply I meant to say “web server” not “web browser”)

  7. Comment by carnage123123123 — April 24, 2009 @ 4:31 pm

    renos24, every device speaking TCP/IP needs a MAC address and an IP address to communicate. Every TCP/IP device encapsulates an 802.3 header and trailer MAC, plus the layer 3 IP, plus the transmission protocol (TCP/UDP) blah blah blah. ARP is for IP to MAC address translation. Computer “B” for example might be the name of a web browser on your LAN and you want to communicate with it. For your computer to communicate with it it must first send a DNS request out to translate the “B”(url) into a IP

  8. Comment by renos24 — April 26, 2009 @ 12:19 pm

    in a LAN enviroment Address Resolution Protocol is used to map OSI level 3 IP addreses to OSI level 2 MAC addreses. dont confuse it with dns , dns has to do with out of the lan connection .

  9. Comment by renos24 — April 27, 2009 @ 1:26 am

    ok , lets say you sit in a lan , ok?
    your lan uses private ip addresses (although you dont have to but it is a good practise)
    in a class c network that is 192.168.0.0/24.
    lets say you want to ping computer “b” 192.168.0.3,
    you are computer “a” , 192.168.0.2
    your pc checks its ARP cache for an entry , if it doesnt have one , it sends an arp broadcast
    and the pc with ip 192.168.0.3 replies with its MAC address .

  10. Comment by pedrowasabi — April 28, 2009 @ 3:18 am

    You are right

  11. Comment by carnage123123123 — April 29, 2009 @ 11:49 pm

    Sorry, I don’t think you are understanding. Without knowing the Computer Name or IP address, how do you think an ARP broadcast will help? The video assumes you know the computer name or IP address from the beginning. I never said the video is “incorrect”, just thats is incomplete. Do you want me to provide the full explanation?

  12. Comment by eighteenfive — April 30, 2009 @ 5:56 pm

    thanks for posting this video, it helps a lot. I hope more IT professionals will be more willing to share their knowledge.

  13. Comment by renos24 — May 3, 2009 @ 12:50 pm

    sorry man the video is correct
    if you are in a LAN enviroment and you want to ping a local pc , then first your pc checks its arp cache for an ip to mac entry , if the arp cache is emty it send a local brodcast so as to find who has the mac of the ip you wanted to ping. Address Resolution Protocol is used to map OSI level 3 IP addreses to OSI level 2 MAC addreses

  14. Comment by sligon00 — May 6, 2009 @ 9:52 pm

    Aha, at last you have seen the light…now just apply that light to your comment about the instructors voice and ask what is more important your opinion about his voice or the information that is being provided free of charge…and the fact that the information alone on its own merit may help others…

  15. Comment by Notumlord — May 9, 2009 @ 7:51 am

    So just because i misspelled a word, it turns me into that word? Nice logic right there *thumbs up*

  16. Comment by sligon00 — May 10, 2009 @ 7:45 am

    I don’t need to do any better…you are the
    one that convicted yourself by your own
    complaining…

  17. Comment by Notumlord — May 12, 2009 @ 10:20 pm

    Is that the best you could do? :P
    Typos = win ^^

  18. Comment by sligon00 — May 15, 2009 @ 6:44 am

    and you are annoying because you can’t spell
    worth beans…lol

  19. Comment by carnage123123123 — May 16, 2009 @ 10:02 am

    lol…this isn’t even 1/5 of the explanation. It excluded where system A found systems B IP address, what DNS server it used. How else could it know that the broadcast was intended for system B? First system A must know the IP address/Name of system B, then afterwards only then can it send an ARP broadcast to which then sends a unicast back to system A. Geesh!

  20. Comment by Notumlord — May 18, 2009 @ 5:15 pm

    What an annoting voice :P

  21. Comment by moersenice — May 20, 2009 @ 4:13 am

    This is easy basic beginner stuff

  22. Comment by rtr5y6uy56u7riurtuir — May 21, 2009 @ 8:18 pm

    If you want to get CCIE CCNP CCNA …etc, I recommended to go to certmagic.
    You’ll search “certmagic” by google.
    Certmagic is GOOD!!

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