This item belongs to Cisco CCNA 200-301 v1.1 Network Fundamentals, where the exam measures whether the candidate can match a technology, field, protocol, or network behavior to its correct operational role. The important step is to classify each left-side item by what it actually does, not by a similar-sounding term. For example, management protocols, address types, QoS mechanisms, wireless settings, and topology terms all have strict meanings in Cisco documentation and IOS behavior. A wrong match usually places a function at the wrong layer or assigns a feature to the wrong control point. The shown mapping keeps those boundaries intact: the component that performs the function is paired with the matching description, while unrelated distractors are left unused or mapped elsewhere. In real troubleshooting, this same skill prevents engineers from applying a security, routing, switching, or automation feature in the wrong part of the design.
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