During OSPF configuration, what is essential to match between adjacent routers?

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The correct answer focuses on the importance of the OSPF Area IDs in establishing adjacency between routers. For OSPF (Open Shortest Path First) to form neighbor relationships and successfully exchange routing information, routers must be configured with matching OSPF Area IDs. This means that if two routers are to communicate and share routing information through OSPF, they must belong to the same OSPF area.

When routers are within the same area, they participate in the OSPF process correctly, allowing them to share link-state advertisements and update their routing tables based on the topology of the networks they are managing. If the Area IDs do not match between adjacent routers, the routers will not form an OSPF adjacency, and consequently, routing information will not be exchanged, leading to incomplete routing tables and potential network issues.

Other factors such as router IDs, subnet masks, and MTU settings play roles in OSPF configuration but do not directly impact the formation of OSPF neighbor relationships as strongly as Area IDs do. Router IDs must be unique but are not compared directly for forming adjacencies, while subnet masks help in proper routing but do not affect the ability to become neighbors. MTU settings do affect data packet transmission but are not

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