To locate or identify an unlabeled network connection, the tool most suited for tracing cables through walls, ceilings, or patch panels is a toner probe (also called a tone generator and probe kit). CompTIA A+ describes this tool as essential for cable identification: the technician attaches the tone generator to one end of the network cable, and the probe detects the signal on the other end, even across long distances or through bundled wiring.
This makes the toner probe ideal for environments where cables are unlabeled, routed through structured cabling systems, or mixed with other wires. It allows the technician to listen for the distinctive tone, confirming the cable’s termination point.
A cable tester (C) verifies wiring integrity and pinouts but cannot trace a cable through physical pathways. It is used after identification, not during it. A loopback plug (B) is used for port testing and NIC diagnostics, not cable tracing. A network tap (A) is used for traffic monitoring, security analysis, and packet capture; it does not help locate cables.
Therefore, the toner probe is the correct tool for identifying and tracing an unlabeled network cable, aligning with CompTIA’s recommended cable management and troubleshooting procedures.