Route preference determines the forwarding table size.
The Answer Is:
B, C
This question includes an explanation.
Explanation:
In Junos OS, route preference (often referred to as administrative distance in other operating systems) is the mechanism used to select the " best " path when the routing table receives multiple advertisements for the exact same destination prefix from different routing sources. The core rule for preference is that lower values indicate a more preferred or "higher priority" route . For example, a direct route has a default preference of 0, a static route is 5, and OSPF internal routes are 10. If a router learns about the same network from both OSPF and a static entry, it will select the static route because 5 is lower than 10.
Crucially, route preference is only evaluated after the longest prefix match (LPM) has been determined. LPM is the absolute first step in packet forwarding; the router will always choose the most specific route available (e.g., a /28 over a /24). Only if there are multiple entries for that same /28 does the router look at preference to break the tie. It is a common misconception that a lower preference value can override a more specific prefix; in reality, a /32 route with a preference of 170 (BGP) will always win over a /24 route with a preference of 5 (Static). Understanding this hierarchy is vital for network architects when designing redundant paths and predictable failover behaviors.
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