nerdexam
Broadcom-VMware

2V0-622D · Question #105

Which three TCP/IP stacks are built in at the VMkernel level in vSphere 6 x? (Choose three.)

The correct answer is B. vMotion C. Provisioning E. Default. vSphere 6.x includes three built-in VMkernel TCP/IP stacks: Default, vMotion, and Provisioning; Management traffic uses the Default stack rather than its own dedicated stack.

Section 2 – Configure and Administer vSphere 6.5 Networking

Question

Which three TCP/IP stacks are built in at the VMkernel level in vSphere 6 x? (Choose three.)

Options

  • AFault Tolerance
  • BvMotion
  • CProvisioning
  • DManagement
  • EDefault

How the community answered

(52 responses)
  • A
    6% (3)
  • B
    92% (48)
  • D
    2% (1)

Why each option

vSphere 6.x includes three built-in VMkernel TCP/IP stacks: Default, vMotion, and Provisioning; Management traffic uses the Default stack rather than its own dedicated stack.

AFault Tolerance

Fault Tolerance logging does not have its own dedicated TCP/IP stack in vSphere 6.x - FT traffic runs over the Default TCP/IP stack.

BvMotionCorrect

The vMotion TCP/IP stack is a dedicated built-in stack that isolates vMotion traffic with its own routing table and network settings, preventing interference with other VMkernel traffic.

CProvisioningCorrect

The Provisioning TCP/IP stack is a built-in stack used for VM cold migration, cloning, and snapshot traffic, providing dedicated routing for these data-transfer operations.

DManagement

Management traffic does not have a separate built-in TCP/IP stack; it uses the Default TCP/IP stack alongside other general VMkernel services.

EDefaultCorrect

The Default TCP/IP stack is the built-in general-purpose stack used by management, vSAN, iSCSI, NFS, and other VMkernel traffic types that do not have a dedicated stack.

Concept tested: VMkernel built-in TCP/IP stack types in vSphere 6.x

Source: https://docs.vmware.com/en/VMware-vSphere/6.5/com.vmware.vsphere.networking.doc/GUID-93ACF23E-A634-4FF6-8EE2-E6F1AFB3E2E4.html

Topics

#TCP/IP stacks#VMkernel#vMotion#networking

Community Discussion

No community discussion yet for this question.

Full 2V0-622D Practice