11.1.10 Packet Tracer – Implement Port Security Answers

Last Updated on November 15, 2020 by Admin

11.1.10 Packet Tracer – Implement Port Security Answers

Packet Tracer – Implement Port Security (Answers Version)

Answers Note: Red font color or gray highlights indicate text that appears in the instructor copy only.

Addressing Table

Device

Interface

IP Address

Subnet Mask

S1

VLAN 1

10.10.10.2

255.255.255.0

PC1

NIC

10.10.10.10

255.255.255.0

PC2

NIC

10.10.10.11

255.255.255.0

Rogue Laptop

NIC

10.10.10.12

255.255.255.0

Objective

Part 1: Configure Port Security

Part 2: Verify Port Security

Background

In this activity, you will configure and verify port security on a switch. Port security allows you to restrict a ports ingress traffic by limiting the MAC addresses that are allowed to send traffic into the port.

Step 1:  Configure Port Security

  1. Access the command line for S1 and enable port security on Fast Ethernet ports 0/1 and 0/2.

Open Configuration Window

S1(config)# interface range f0/1 – 2

S1(config-if-range)# switchport port-security

  1. Set the maximum so that only one device can access the Fast Ethernet ports 0/1 and 0/2.

S1(config-if-range)# switchport port-security maximum 1

  1. Secure the ports so that the MAC address of a device is dynamically learned and added to the running configuration.

S1(config-if-range)# switchport port-security mac-address sticky

  1. Set the violation mode so that the Fast Ethernet ports 0/1 and 0/2 are not disabled when a violation occurs, but a notification of the security violation is generated and packets from the unknown source are dropped.

S1(config-if-range)# switchport port-security violation restrict

  1. Disable all the remaining unused ports. Use the range keyword to apply this configuration to all the ports simultaneously.

S1(config-if-range)# interface range f0/3 – 24 , g0/1 – 2

S1(config-if-range)# shutdown

Step 2:  Verify Port Security

  1. From PC1, ping PC2.
  2. Verify that port security is enabled and the MAC addresses of PC1 and PC2 were added to the running configuration.

S1# show run | begin interface

  1. Use port-security show commands to display configuration information.

S1# show port-security

S1# show port-security address

  1. Attach Rogue Laptop to any unused switch port and notice that the link lights are red.
  2. Enable the port and verify that Rogue Laptop can ping PC1 and PC2. After verification, shut down the port connected to Rogue Laptop.
  3. Disconnect PC2 and connect Rogue Laptop to F0/2, which is the port to which PC2 was originally connected. Verify that Rogue Laptop is unable to ping PC1.
  4. Display the port security violations for the port to which Rogue Laptop is connected.

S1# show port-security interface f0/2

Close Configuration Window

Question:

How many violations have occurred?

Type your answers here.

There should be a violation count of at least four, one for each ping request.

  1. Disconnect Rouge Laptop and reconnect PC2. Verify PC2 can ping PC1.

Question:

Why is PC2 able to ping PC1, but the Rouge Laptop is not?

Type your answers here.

The port security that was enabled on the port only allowed the device, whose MAC was learned first, access to the port while preventing all other devices access.