CSE :: Windows 2000 Server
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The network uses TCP/IP as the only network protocol. You configure the remote access server on the network. Some users report that when they connect to the server they receive the following message |" IPX SPX compatible computer deported error 733" The EPP control network protocol for the network is not available. If the users allow the connection to continue they are able to connect to the services that use TCP/IP. You want to prevent this message from being displayed. What should you do?
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You are the administrator of your company's network. You are configuring the security policy for a group of users in the finance organizational unit (OU). You need to configure a group policy so that future changes to group policy will be applied within 15 minutes to any computers that are log on to the network. What should you do?
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Your network contains 10 domain controllers, 10 member servers, and approximately 1,000 client computers. All the servers run Windows 2000 Server, and all the client computers run Windows 2000 Professional. Two of the domain controllers act as DNS servers. Users of client computers use file sharing to grant access to files stored locally. The network has 10 subnets and uses TCP/IP as the only network protocol. You want to configure the network so that all computers can resolve the addresses of all other computers by using DNS. Client computers must be able to register and resolve addresses if a server fails. How should you configure the DNS servers?
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You are the network administrator for your company. The company has numerous branch offices, and each office uses Internet Connecting Sharing to connect to the Internet. A new employee named David Johnson is configuring a Windows 2000 Server computer as a file server. When David uses Windows update for the first time and select Product Update, he receives an error message stating that access is denied. David needs to be able to update the file by using his account. What should you do?
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You install Terminal Services on a Windows 2000 domain controller. You install Terminal Services Client on users' client computers. Users report that when they try to connect to the Terminal server, they receive the following error message: "The local policy of this system does not allow you to logon interactively." When you attempt to log on to the Terminal server as an administrator from a user's computer, you log on successfully. You want users to be able to log on to the Terminal server. What should you do?
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How can you assign an application to one processor exclusively?
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You install your boot volume on volume C on your Windows 2000 Server computer. You mirror volume C on dynamic Disk 1. Two years later, during routine server maintenance, you open Disk Management and find that the status of volume C is Failed Redundancy. The status of Disk 1 is Missing. You attempt to reactivate Disk 1, but the status of volume C does not return to Healthy. What should you do next?
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You want to install Windows 2000 server on 15 new computers. You want to install, configure and test all 2000 servers before shipping them to your branch offices. You want the users at the branch offices to enter the serial numbers and computer names once they receive the computers. What should you do?
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You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 server computer. The server has a single hard disk with two partitions. An application that runs on your server creates a very large log file in the SystemrootYTemp folder. There is not enough free space on the system partition to accommodate the log file. The application does not provide a way to change the path to the log file. You want to run the application on your server. What should you do?
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You are the administrator of a network that consists of a single Windows NT 4.0 domain. The network contains five Windows NT Server domain controllers and 1,000 Windows NT Workstation client computers. You want to install Windows 2000 Server on a new computer. You want the new computer to act as a domain controller in the existing domain. What should you do?
A.
Configure a client computer to use only TCP/IP for the connections to the remote access server
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B.
Configure the client computer to use a defined IPX network address for the connection to the remote access servers
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C.
Configure the remote access server to allow IPX based remote access demand dial connections
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D.
Configure the remote access server to disable multi-link connection
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E.
None of above
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A.
Enable the background refresh settings to use the default group policy refresh date
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B.
Enable the asynchronous group policy application settings
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C.
Enable and configure the group policy refresh interval for domain controller
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D.
Enable and configure the group policy refresh interval for computers
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E.
None of above
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A.
Configure one server with a standard primary zone for the domain, and configure at least one server with standard secondary zone
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B.
Configure one server with a standard primary zone for the domain, and configure at least one server with an Active Directory integrated primary zone
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C.
Configure one server with an Active directory integrated primary zone for the domain, and configure at least one server with a standard secondary zone
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D.
Configure at least two servers with Active Directory integrated primary zones for the domain
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E.
Configure at least two servers with standard primary zones for the domain
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A.
Configure the settings for Internet Connecting Sharing to allow POP3 access
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B.
Configure the settings for Internet Connecting Sharing to allow SMTP access
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C.
Give David's user account administrator privileges on the Windows 2000 Server computer
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D.
Instruct David to log on as a domain administrator on the Windows 2000 Server computer
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E.
None of above
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A.
Right click on application executable, select properties and select assign processor
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B.
Right click on application process in Task Manager, select Set Affinity, and select the appropriate processor
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C.
Open Task Manager, chose options from task bar, select processor and assign processes to appropriate processor
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D.
Open Task Manager, chose Performance, chose view all processors, assign processes to appropriate processor
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E.
None of above.
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A.
Replace Disk 1 and restart the computer. The mirror will automatically regenerate
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B.
Remove the mirror on Disk 1, replace the disk, and then add back the mirror to the new Disk 1
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C.
Replace Disk 1 and copy all data from volume C to a new NTFS primary partition on the new Disk 1. Restart the computer
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D.
Rescan the disks, remove the mirror, and delete the data on Disk 1. Then re-create the mirror
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E.
None of above
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A.
Install Windows 2000 server on the computers. Use Sysprep.exe to create the Unattend.txt file, place file on the root of the drive
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B.
Install Windows 2000 server on the computers. Use Setup Manager to create a sysprep.inf file for use with sysprep.exe Place the sysprep.inf on the computers and run sysprep -noidgen
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C.
Create an Unattend.txt file by using Setup Manager. Create a UDF file that identifies the names of the new computers
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D.
Create a UDF file by using setup manager. Create an Unattend.txt file that identifies the names of the new computers
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E.
None of above
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A.
On the second partition, create a shared folder named Temp
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B.
In the systemroot folder, create a shortcut named Temp that points to the second partition on the disk
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C.
Add a second hard disk. Create and format a partition from the free space on the second hard disk. Create a Temp folder on the new partition. Mount the system partition as the Temp folder on the new partition
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D.
Add a second hard disk. Delete the contents of the SystemrootYTemp folder. Create and format a partition from the free space on the second hard disk. Mount the partition as the SystemrootYTemp folder
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E.
None of above
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A.
On the new computer, install Windows NT Server 4.0 and designate the computer as a BDC in the existing domain. Promote the computer to the PDC of the domain. Upgrade the computer to Windows 2000 Server
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B.
On the new computer, install Windows NT Server 4.0 and designate the computer as a PDC in a new domain that has the same NetBIOS name as the existing Windows NT domain. Upgrade the computer to Windows 2000 Server. Use Active Directory Sites and Services to force synchronization of the domain controllers
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C.
Shut down the PDC of the existing Windows NT domain from the network. On the new computer, install Windows 2000 Server, and then run the Active Directory Installation wizard to install Active Directory, specifying the same NetBIOS name for the Windows2000 domain as the existing Windows NT domain
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D.
Shut down the PDC of the existing Windows NT domain from the network. On the new computer, install Windows 2000 Server, and then run the Active Directory Installation wizard to install Active Directory as a replica in the existing Windows NT domain. Promote the new computer to the PDC of the domain. Restart the Windows NT PDC on the network and demote it to a BDC
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E.
None of above
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