InVirtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP), the primary goal is to provide a highly available default gateway for end hosts. However, there is a specific operational behavior in the VRRP standard (RFC 3768/RFC 5798) regarding how the "Virtual Router" responds to traffic destined for its own Virtual IP (VIP).
According to Juniper Networks documentation, by default, a VRRP router that is in the Master state will only respond to packets destined for the VIP if that router is theIP Address Owner(meaning its physical interface IP matches the VIP). If the router is a "non-owner" (a common configuration in many networks), it will forward traffic on behalf of the VIP but will not respond to management traffic, such asICMP Echo Requests (Pings), directed at the VIP itself.
To satisfy the requirement that "servers connected to the network must be able to ping their gateway," theaccept-data (Option D)parameter must be configured. In Junos OS, the accept-data statement allows the VRRP Master to respond to traffic destined for the virtual IP address even if it is not the address owner. This includes responding to Pings and allowing other management connections like SSH or Telnet to the VIP.
Regarding the other options:
Preempt (Option B):While preempt is often used to ensure the primary router regains control, in Junos, a router with the highest priority (255) defaults to preemptive behavior, and accept-data is specifically what solves the "pinging the gateway" requirement.
Track (Option A):Tracking is used for failover logic but doesn't affect the ability to ping the VIP.
Static ARP (Option C):This is unnecessary as VRRP uses a virtual MAC address to ensure hosts can resolve the VIP via standard NDP (for IPv6) or ARP (for IPv4).