问题 单项选择题

下列描述中,不属于链路状态路由协议的特点是____________。

A.提供了整个网络的拓扑视图

B.计算到达各个目标的最短通路

C.邻居结点之间互相交换路由表

D.具有事件触发的路由更新功能

答案

参考答案:C

解析:解析:链路状态路南选择协议又称为最短路径优先协议,它基于Edsger Dijkstra的最短路径优先(SPF)算法。链路状态路由协议是层次式的,网络中的路由器并不向邻居传递“路由项”,而是通告给邻居一些链路状态。与距离矢量路由协议相比,链路状态协议对路由的计算方法有本质的差别。距离矢量协议是平面式的,所有的路由学习完全依靠邻居,交换的是路由项。链路状态协议只是通告给邻居一些链路状态。运行该路由协议的路由器不是简单地从相邻的路南器学习路南,而是把路由器分成区域,收集区域的所有的路由器的链路状态信息,根据状态信息生成网络拓扑结构,每一个路由器再根据拓扑结构计算出路m。

填空题

Questions 19-25


·Read the following article from a magazine and answer questions 19-25.
·For questions 19-25, choose the correct answer A, B, C or D.
·Mark your answer on the Answer Sheet.

The Big Easy on the Brink


A Category 5 hurricane would come barreling out of the Gulf of Mexico, It would cause Lake Pontchartrain, north of New Orleans, to overflow, pouring down millions of gallons of water on the city. Then things would really get ugly. Evacuation routes would be blocked. Buildings would collapse. Chemicals and hazardous waste would dissolve, turning the floodwaters into a lethal soup. In the end, what was left of the city might not be worth saving. "There’s concern it would essentially destroy New Orleans," says Suhayda, a water-resources expert at Louisiana State University.
New Orleans has always had a complicated relationship with the water surrounding it. Everyone told the first settlers this was the wrong place to build a city. It is wedged precariously between the mighty Mississippi and Lake Pontchartrain, and most of it was once swampland. Aggravating the problem is the fact that much of New Orleans is below sea level, so that after a good rain, the water just settles in. There is now a decent pumping system, which helps. Old-timers, however, still talk of the days when, after a bad storm, bodies were washed out of the cemeteries.
What is threatening New Orleans is a combination of two man-made problems: more levees and fewer wetlands. The levees installed along the Mississippi to protect the city from water surges have had an annoying effect: they have actually make it more vulnerable to flooding. That’s because New Orleans has been kept in place by the precarious balance of two opposing forces. Because the city is constructed on 100 feet of soft silt, sand and clay, it naturally "subsides", or sinks, several feet a century. Historically, that subsidence has been counteracted by sedimentation: new silt, sand and clay that are deposited when the river floods. But since the levees went up-mostly after the great flood of 1927—the river has not been flooding and sedimentation has stopped.
New Orleans’ other major man-made problem is that its wetlands and its low-lying barrier islands are disappearing. The Louisiana coast is losingl6,000 acres of wetland each year, mostly as a result of population expansion into once pristine areas, destructive oil and gas drilling, pollution and land loss through lack of sedimentation. As it turns out, wetland, and barrier islands aren’t just nice to look at; they are also a key natural barrier to hurricanes. (Every 2.7miles of wetland absorbs a foot of storm surge.) As the wetlands go, the chance of a hurricane blowing the city away grows.
So far, little has been done to save the city. However, while the grimmest of the doomsayers warn that New Orleans could be next Atlantis, some laid-back residents are saying that it could just as easily become the next Venice and that after the flood, the good times won’t roll—they’ll float.

The two opposing forces refer to ______.

A.Mississippi and Lake Pontchartrain

B.Subsidence of the city and sedimentation

C.rising levees and declining sea-level

D.down-going of the city and rising Sea-level

单项选择题