IP Prefix-List tricky question

A few days ago I did encounter a task in one of these preparation workbooks for CCIE R&S Lab which was very tricky. This task is not a hard one and does not require extensive knowledge (it can be a CCNP level question as well), but the way the question is formulated can create confusion.I would appreciate your comments on this topic.

The task states that I have a number of subnets from which the followings are important for
our issue:

10.4.1.4/30
10.4.2.8/29
10.4.3.16/28
10.4.4.32/27
10.4.5.64/26
10.4.6.128/25

The other present subnets are something like 10.7.x.x. I add this here just to see that it does not affect the result of this task.

The request is to configure a prefix-list following these rules:

– allow all subnets in 10.4.0.0
– as specific as possible, I should not allow other prefixes
– minimum number of prefix-lists

Considering the above one I did consider the following to be the correct answer:

ip prefix-list ONE permit 10.4.0.0/21 ge 25 le 30

However the proposed solution was:

ip prefix-list ONE seq 5 permit 10.4.0.0/22 ge 23 le 30
ip prefix-list ONE seq 10 permit 10.4.4.0/22 ge 23 le 28

Both solutions are working, nevertheless which one would be the correct one in the exam?

I asked this question on the GroupStudy List, and Maarten Vervoorn came up with a new proposal:

ip prefix-list ONE seq 5 permit 10.4.0.0/22 ge 28 le 30
ip prefix-list ONE seq 10 permit 10.4.4.0/22 ge 25 le 27

Also a good solution, but is the best solution? Hard to say. The advice that I got is that if you have such task in the lab exam to describe the issue to your proctor, explain all possible solution so he or she can see that you fully understand the multiple solutions and base on the answer pickup the best solution. I think this is the only way to solve this kind of questions. If you have other ideas, I would like to hear them.


Core Knowledge Questions Removed for CCIE R&S and Voice Lab Exams

Cisco removed the Core Knowledge Questions section from the CCIE R&S and Voice Lab exams.

This sections STILL exist on CCIE Service Provider, CCIE Security, CCIE Storage Networking and  CCIE Wireless Lab.

Please find below the official announcement and the reasons regarding this section removal from R&S and Voice lab exams:

With more than six months of exam results now available, Cisco is able to report that the troubleshooting components of the CCIE R&S v4.0 and CCIE Voice v3.0 lab exams are performing well in validating expert level networking skills.  Considering these results, Cisco has decided to eliminate the Core Knowledge questions from the current CCIE R&S v4.0 and CCIE Voice v3.0 Lab Exams.  Beginning on May 10, 2010, CCIE R&S and CCIE Voice Lab Exams, in all global locations, will no longer include the four open-ended Core Knowledge questions.  The total lab time will remain eight hours.  For the CCIE R&S Lab Exam, this means candidates will begin with the two-hour Troubleshooting section, followed by a six-hour Configuration section.  For CCIE Voice, candidates will have the full eight hours to complete the integrated exam.  At this time, only the R&S and Voice tracks will be eliminating the Core Knowledge questions.
You can read more here:

https://learningnetwork.cisco.com/docs/DOC-6484