The correct answer is Enable LLDP on the neighbor switch. Cisco MDS and Nexus SAN troubleshooting is driven by fabric state: the host and target must be in the correct VSAN, must complete FLOGI/PLOGI where applicable, and must be permitted by active zoning, fcdomain, FSPF, NPV/NPIV, or port-security policy. This question focuses on VSAN, FCoE, DCBX, LLDP, so the selected action fixes the dependency that prevents the initiator, target, or inter-switch link from becoming usable. Cisco documentation emphasizes checking VSAN membership, active zonesets, correct port mode, fabric binding, device-alias consistency, and the relevant FC databases before changing unrelated server settings. The distractors either target a different database, use the wrong port role, or would not cause the observed Fibre Channel state to change. After the fix, the engineer should confirm the interface state, FLOGI database, name-server entries, zoneset activation, and successful initiator-to-target reachability with tools such as fcping or fabric show commands.