Which three options are types of slow VI AN connectivity?

Which three options are types of slow VI AN connectivity? (Choose three)
A. slow broadcast domain connectivity.
B. slow routing domain connectivity.
C. slow default gateway connectivity.
D. slow application domain connectivity.
E. slow collision domain connectivity.
F. slow inter VI AN connectivity.

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2 thoughts on “Which three options are types of slow VI AN connectivity?

  1. I was like “What is VI AN?? Is there an acronym I have yet to learn?? OMG!”
    It was meant to be “VLAN” ….
    Anyways, the answers are correct.

    https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/support/docs/lan-switching/virtual-lans-vlan-trunking-protocol-vlans-vtp/23637-slow-int-vlan-connect.html#three_causes

    Three Categories of Causes
    The causes of slowness can be divided into three categories, as follows:

    Slow Collision Domain Connectivity
    Collision domain is defined as connected devices configured in a half-duplex port configuration, connected to each other or a hub. If a device is connected to a switch port and full-duplex mode is configured, such a point-to-point connection is collisionless. Slowness on such a segment still can occur for different reasons.

    Slow Broadcast Domain Connectivity (Slow VLAN)
    Slow broadcast domain connectivity occurs when the whole VLAN (that is, all devices on the same VLAN) experiences slowness.

    Slow InterVLAN Connectivity (Slow Forwarding Between VLANs)
    Slow interVLAN connectivity (slow forwarding between VLANs) occurs when there is no slowness on the local VLAN, but traffic needs to be forwarded to an alternate VLAN, and it is not forwarded at the expected rate.

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