GATE · Computer Networks · Lagos, Nigeria
Computer Networks for the GATE Exam — Lagos candidates
10% of the GATE test plan. OSI and TCP/IP models, routing protocols, TCP/UDP, IP addressing, subnetting, and congestion control — approximately 10% of GATE CS. Calibrated for Lagosian candidates.
Behind every published pass rate is a distribution of which topics caused most of the failures. This is one of those topics. Computer Networks sits at roughly 10% of the Graduate Aptitude Test in Engineering content distribution — Computer Networks is the most calculation-heavy GATE CS topic after Computer Organization. Subnetting, sliding-window throughput calculations, and routing-table lookups are numerically tested every year. The topic also includes conceptual questions on TCP state machines and protocol mechanisms. Pass rates for the GATE are published annually by the awarding body and vary by cohort and locale. For Lagos candidates preparing for GATE, the calibration of study to local context matters: Lagos is West Africa's densest exam centre — JAMB UTME, WAEC, IELTS, and TOEFL all operate large weekly sessions. Pearson VUE Lagos serves NCLEX, GRE, and GMAT candidates region-wide.
Common failure modes
These are the patterns that cause most candidates to lose marks on this topic. Recognising them in advance is half the work.
- !Subnetting errors — off-by-one in the number of usable hosts (subtract 2 for network and broadcast addresses)
- !Confusing the window size in bytes vs in segments when calculating TCP throughput
- !Applying CSMA/CD to wireless networks (CSMA/CA is used in 802.11, not CSMA/CD)
- !Misidentifying which layer a protocol belongs to: ARP is Layer 2/3 boundary, ICMP is Layer 3, DNS is Layer 7
- !Calculating distance-vector routing loops instead of counting-to-infinity scenarios correctly
Study tips
- 1Drill IPv4 subnetting until it is mechanical: given an IP address and prefix length, identify the network address, broadcast address, first host, last host, and number of usable hosts.
- 2For TCP throughput, use: throughput = window_size / RTT. Know how to adjust for slow-start and packet loss.
- 3Memorise the OSI layer and which protocols live where. GATE asks "at which layer does X protocol operate?" in 1-mark questions.
- 4Practice sliding-window protocol problems: given window size W and propagation delay, find channel utilisation.
- 5Trace distance-vector and link-state routing convergence on small topologies (4–5 nodes).
- 6JAMB UTME is delivered as CBT only — book your nearest CBT centre (Yaba, Surulere, Ikeja) early; centres outside Lagos State require interstate travel.
- 7IELTS speaking and listening sessions in Victoria Island fill 6 weeks ahead during peak migration season (May–August). Book a Lekki or Ikeja slot if VI is full.
- 8For NCLEX/GRE/GMAT: the Pearson VUE Ikeja centre is the most reliable NG site; bring a backup ID and arrive 90 minutes early — Lagos traffic is the most common cause of missed slots.
Sample GATE Computer Networks questions
These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real GATE questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.
- 1
A subnet mask of 255.255.255.192 (i.e., /26) gives how many usable host addresses per subnet?
- A62Correct
- B64
- C126
- D30
Why this answer?
(GATE CS style) /26 means 6 host bits. Total addresses = 2⁶ = 64. Usable hosts = 64 − 2 = 62 (subtract network and broadcast addresses).
- 2
Which protocol resolves an IP address to a MAC address on a local network?
- ADNS
- BDHCP
- CARPCorrect
- DICMP
Why this answer?
(GATE CS style) ARP (Address Resolution Protocol) broadcasts a request with a target IP address; the host with that IP replies with its MAC address. DNS resolves hostnames to IP addresses; DHCP assigns IP addresses dynamically; ICMP handles error messages.
- 3
In a sliding-window protocol, if the window size is W and the link propagation delay is T_p and transmission time is T_t, maximum utilisation is:
- AW / (1 + 2T_p/T_t)Correct
- BT_t / (T_t + T_p)
- CW × T_t / T_p
- DT_p / (W × T_t)
Why this answer?
(GATE CS style) For stop-and-wait, efficiency = 1/(1 + 2a) where a = T_p/T_t. For a window of W frames, efficiency = W/(1 + 2a) provided W ≤ 1 + 2a; otherwise efficiency approaches 1.
Frequently asked questions
Is IPv6 tested in GATE CS?
How important is the TCP three-way handshake for GATE?
What is the GATE pass rate for Lagosian candidates?
How long should Lagosian candidates study Computer Networks for the GATE?
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Related study guides
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- Theory of Computation for GATE (Lagos, Nigeria)Another GATE topic for Lagosian candidates
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- Computer Networks for GATE — U.S. candidatesSame Computer Networks topic, different locale framing
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- Computer Networks for GATE — Indian candidatesSame Computer Networks topic, different locale framing
Regulatory citation: GATE 2024 CS Syllabus — Computer Networks (OSI/TCP-IP Layers, LAN Protocols, IP Addressing, Routing, Transport Layer, Application Layer).