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微软认证最新考题MCSE 70-216a

王朝other·作者佚名  2006-01-08
窄屏简体版  字體: |||超大  

MCSE 70-216a

1. You are the administrator of your company a network. Your network is configured as shown in the exhibit (Click the Exhibit button) You configure a Windows 2000 Server computer to route all network traffic on your intranet. Users on both segments need access to files on the other segment. A portion of the routers route table is shown in the following table.

Network destination Netmask Gateway Interface Metric

10.0.0.0 255.0.0.0 10.0.0.169 10.0.0.169 1

10.0.0.169 255.255.255.255 127.0.0.1 127.0.0.1 1

192.168.0.0 255.255.0.0 192.168.0.200 192.168.0.200 1

192.168.0.200 255.255.255.255 127.0.0.1 127.0.0.1 1

You also install and start the IIS web service on the server. Users on both segments report that they cannot access the Web service. What should you do?

A. Disable all TCP/IP port filters

B. Create a PPTP tunnel so that it has a filter that filters everything except protocol

C. Run the route delete 192.168.0.0 command and the route add 192.168.0.0 mask 255.255.0.0 10.0.0.169 command

D. Run the route delete 10.0.0.0 command and the route add 192.168.0.0 mask 255.0.0.0 192.168.0.200 command

Answer: A

2. Your company has a SNMP enabled network router installed on its network. Your company wants to monitor all SNMP traffic generated by the Router. You install network Monitor on a Windows 2000 Server computer on your network Your router is configured to trap to an SNMP Manager installed on another server. You want to receive a notification whenever the network router raises an SNMP trap What should you do? (Choose two)

A. Create a network Monitor filter that has a pattern match for SNMP traffic

B. Install SNMP on the server

C. Create a network monitor trigger to run the Net Send command

D. Create a TCP/IP filter on the server

E. Start the Windows 2000 Alerter Service on the server

F. Configure the network router to trap to the IP address of the server

Answer: AC

3. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network that has a main office and one branch office. The company leases a 128Kbps ISDN line to connect the main office to the branch office. You configure Routing and Remote Access on a stand-alone Windows 2000 Server computer in each office to provide a demand dial connection You want to encrypt traffic over the ISDN connection and you want to prevent unnecessary connections over the ISDN line. What should you do?

A. Configure a PPTP demand-dial connection to connect the two offices over the ISDN connection and ensure that data encryption is enabled

Set the IP Demand Dial Filters to exclude NetBIOS broadcast traffic

B. Configure a PPTP demand-dial connection to connect the two offices over the ISDN connection and ensure that data encryption is enabled

Set the IP Demand Dial Filters to exclude Remote Procedure Call traffic

C. Configure an L2TP demand-dial connection to connect the two offices over the ISDN connection

D. Configure inbound and outbound filters to exclude all NetBIOS broadcast traffic

E. Configure an L2TP demand-dial connection to connect the two offices over the ISDN connection

In the demand dial filter list configure filters to exclude Remote Procedure Call traffic

Answer: A

4. You are the administrator of your company’s network. Your network is configured as shown in the exhibit (Click the Exhibit button ) You investigate a report that administrators in the Dallas office have installed and are using network Monitor. Your company allows only administrators in the Atlanta office to install and use network Monitor. You install network Monitor on Prof1. You need to monitor how many copies of network Monitor are currently running What should you do? (Choose two)

A On the Tools menu in network Monitor select Identify Network Monitor Users

B On the Options menu in network Monitor select Show Address Names

C On the Tools menu in network Monitor select Find Routers

D On the Display menu in network Monitor select Find all names

E. Install network Monitor on a computer on Segment B

F. Permit all ports in the TCP/IP filter on the router

Answer: AE

5. You are the administrator of your company’s network. Your network has 1900 hosts. Your network requires Internet connectivity. Aside from the connection to the Internet, your network is not routed. Your ISP assigns you the following eight network addresses

192.24.32.0/24

192.24.33.0/24

192.24.34.0/24

192.30.35.0/24

192.30.36.0/24

192.30.37.0/24

192.30.38.0/24

192.30.39.0/24

You want to minimize the complexity of routing tables on the network while maintaining Internet connectivity for all hosts. Which subnet mask should you configure to meet these goals?

A. 255.255.240.0

B. 255.255.248.0

C. 255.255.252.0

D. 255.255.254.0

E. 255.255.255.0

Answer: B

6. You are the administrator of your company’s network. Your network is configured as shown in the exhibit (Click the Exhibit button ) On your Windows 2000 Server computer named Srvl, you install Client Service for Netware and NWLINK with the default settings. You perform these installations to access files stored on your company’s Netware servers. From Srvl you can connect to Srv2. You can also connect to Netware1 and Netware3 but you cannot connect to Netware2 and Netware4. Netware2 and Netware4 run different versions of Netware than Netwarel and Netware3 You want to configure Srvl to connect to all the Netware servers. What should you do?

A. Set the adapter to Manual frame type detection and add the frame type of each Netware server

B. Manually configure the Internal Network Number to 00000000

C. Enable direct hosting of Internetwork Packet Exchange (IPX)

D. Install File and Print Services for Netware

Answer: A

7. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network. You administer the routers in your network. Your Internet service provider (ISP) has assigned your network the network ID 172.24.8.0/22. You assign blocks of IP addresses to other administrators in your company when they request them. All of the routers in your network use either Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) or RIP version 2. You want to create two subnets that will each have approximately 75 computers. Your company expects the number of computers on these archers to remain at 75 To create the subnets that will accommodate 75 computers you want to use the most specific number of bits in your subnet mask. You also want to use the first two available network ID numbers For the two subnets you need to create, click the Select and Place button and then drag the appropriate network ID numbers to the appropriate boxes

8. You are the administrator of your company’s network. Your network consists of 100 computers that use the IPX/SPX protocol. You plan to migrate the network to use TCP/IP and establish connectivity with the Internet. Your (ISP) assigns the address 192.168.16.0/124 to your network Your network requires 10 subnets with at least 10 hosts per subnet. Which subnet mask should you configure to meet this requirement?

A. 255.255.255.0

B. 255.255.255.192

C. 255.255.255.224

D. 255.255.255.240

E. 255.255.255.248

Answer: D

9. You are the administrator of your company’s network. Your network consists of Windows 2000 Server computers and Windows 2000 Professional computers. You create an IPSec policy named accountingsec for use by employees in your accounting department. Your company is concerned that the keys used for encryption could be compromised and used to decrypt future communications You want to prevent the re-use of previous-session keys. You also want to limit performance degradation. What should you do?

A. Decrease the frequency of policy checks for updates

B. On the Generate a new key every properly modify the time allocations

C. Select the Master key Perfect Forward Secrecy check box

D. Select the Session key Perfect Forward Secrecy check box

Answer: D

10. You are the administrator of your company’s network. Your network consists of 15 Windows 2000 Server computers, 100 Windows 2000 Professional computers, and one Netware server. Your users need to access the Sys volume on the Netware server. You want your company’s administrators to have complete access to the Sys volume. You want all other users to have read only access You configure Gateway Service for Netware on a Windows 2000 Server computer. You want to configure the appropriate access to the Netware server What should you do? (Choose two )

A. To the NTGateway Group on the Netware server, add the user accounts that need access to the Netware server.

B. To the NTGateway Group on the Windows 2000 Server computer, add the user accounts that need access to the Netware server

C. To the NTGateway Group on the Netware server, add the NT Gateway User Account

D. To the NTGateway Group on the Windows 2000 Server computer, add the NT Gateway User Account

E. On the Windows 2000 Server computer, grant Full Control permission to administrators and Read permission to users

Answer: CE

11. You are the administrator of your company’s network. The network consists of a single Windows 2000 domain. The network has Windows 2000 Server computers, Windows 2000 Professional computers, and Windows NT Workstation 4.0 computers distributed across two IP subnets as shown in the exhibit (Click the Exhibit bunch ) Two Windows 2000 domain controllers are located on Subnet1. Each domain controller is also a DNS server hosting an Active Directory integrated zone. You implement WINS for Netbios name resolution on your network. WINS is installed on a server on Subnet2. Users of the Windows NT Workstation 4.0 computers on Subnet2 report that they are receiving the following error message: “Domain Controller cannot be located.” Subsequently, these users cannot be validated on the network Windows NT Workstation 4.0 users on Subnet1 are not experiencing this problem. However, they do report that response times for logon requests are extremely slow. None of the Windows 2000 Professional users on either subnet report these problems. You want to ensure that Windows NT Workstation 4.0 users on Subne2 can be validated. You also want to improve logon request response time for users on Subnet1 What should you do?

A Configure the router to forward Netbios broadcast packets

B Configure the Windows NT Workstation 4.0 computers as DNS clients in the existing zone

C Configure the Windows NT Workstation 4.0 computers as WINS clients

D Configure the Windows 2000 Server domain controller computers as WINS clients

Answer: D

12. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network. The network has two Windows 2000 based WINS servers. You want periodic backups of the WINS database of both WINS servers to occur automatically How should you configure the network to accomplish this goal?

A In the WINS console on both WINS servers use the right mouse button (right click) to select the server name and then select the Back Up Database command

B In the WINS console on both WINS servers configure the General properties of the WINS server to specify a default backup path

C On both WINS servers use Windows Backup to schedule a regular backup of the System32folder

D On both WINS servers configure the File Replication Service to copy the System32folder to another location on the disk

Answer: B

13. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network. The network has three Windows 2000 based WINS servers named Srv1, Srv2 and Srv3. You want to periodically compact the WINS database to reclaim unused space. How should you perform a manual compaction of the WINS database on the Srv1 WINS server?

A Configure the Srv1 WINS server to block replication of WINS records from the Srv2 and Srv3 WINS servers Initiate database consistency checking

Allow replication of records from the Srv2 and Srv3 WINS servers

B Stop the Srv1 WINS server

Use the jetpack command line tool to compact the WINS database

Start the Srv1 WINS server again

C Stop the Srv1 WINS server

Use the Backup Database command to create a backup of the Srv1 WINS database

Compact the backup of the database by using the compact command line tool

Use the Restore Database command to restore the backup of the database

Start the Srv1 WINS server again

D In the WINS console, use the Scavenge Database command

Answer: B

14. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network. The network has 18000 Windows 2000 Professional WINS client computers and six Windows 2000 based WINS servers. The WINS client computers are portable client computers and they frequently connect to the network at different locations. The WINS client computers access NetBIOS-based resources. The TCP/IP configuration of the WINS client computers is provided by DHCP servers on the network Some of the WAN links in your network are unreliable. You want to ensure that all Windows 2000 Professional computers are able to resolve NetBIOS names even if some of the WINS servers are not available How should you configure the network to accomplish this goal?

A On each segment configure a computer as a WINS proxy

B Configure the DHCP servers to provide each client computer with a list of WINS servers

C Configure the WINS servers to enable burst handling. Set the number of requests for burst handling to High

D Configure the DHCP server to set the NetBIOS over TCP/IP node type for each client computer to Mixed(m-node)

Answer: B

15. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network. The network has six 2000 based-WINS servers and two Windows 2000 based DHCP servers. To anticipate the migration of the network from WINS to DNS, you decide to remove one WINS server named Wins6 from the network by performing the following actions: On Wins6 stop the WINS Service and uninstall WINS. On the DHCP servers in the network, reconfigure the options to no longer specify Wins6 as a WINS server. Configure the DHCP options to instead use the other five WINS servers equally. On WINS client computers that are manually configured to use TCP/IP, reconfigure the network properties to no longer use Wins6 as a WINS server. Configure these client computers to instead use any of the other five WINS servers .On one of the remaining WINS servers delete the static mappings originally made on Wins6. After two weeks you notice that static mappings originally made on Wins6 are still present on all the remaining WINS servers What should you do to permanently remove these unwanted static mappings from the remaining WINS servers ?

A On the remaining WINS servers use the Scavenge Database command in the WINS console

B On the remaining WINS servers perform an offline compaction of the WINS database

C Configure the remaining WINS servers to use Migrate On handling of static entries

D On one of the remaining WINS servers, manually tombstone the Wins6 owner from the database

Answer: D

16. You are the administrator of your company’s network. The network consists of four IP subnets connected by a router. The network contains 12 Windows 2000 Server computers and 100 Windows 2000 Professional computers evenly distributed across the four subnets. All of the servers are used to serve file and print resources to the client computers You install the WINS Server service on a server on one subnet. You configure the WINS option in a DHCP scope to configure all of the other computers on the network to register with and query the WINS server for NetBIOS name resolution Within four hours of the installation and configuration, users on the remote subnets report that they cannot access resources located on the WINS server by NetBIOS name. Other TCP/IP connectivity is not affected. Users located on the same subnet as the WINS server are experiencing no problems accessing these same resources What should you do to resolve this problem?

A Install a WINS proxy agent on each remote subnet

B Install a WINS proxy agent on the same subnet as the WINS server

C Configure the WINS server to include the IP addresses of each gateway on the router

D Configure the WINS server to include its own IP address as a WINS client computer

Answer: D

17. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network. The network consists Windows 2000 Server computer named Atlanta and 120 Windows 2000 Professional computers. Atlanta has a dial-up connection that connects to the Internet All Windows 2000 Professional computers on the network are configured to use a dynamically assigned IP address. The network has one DHCP server. To allow all Windows 2000 Professional computers on the network to access the Internet through the dial-up connection of Atlanta you install and configure the network Address Translation (NAT) routing protocol on Atlanta Your Internet service provider (ISP) has allocated four IP addresses 207.46.179.4 through 207.46.179.7 to your network. You want Atlanta to use the four IP addresses for the translated connection to the ISP. How should you configure Atlanta?

A Configure the NAT routing protocol to use the IP addresses in the range starting with 207.46.179.4 with a mask of 255.255.255.252 for the DHCP Allocator

B Configure the public Interface of the NAT routing protocol to use an address pool with a starting address of 207.46.179.4 and a mask of 255.255.255.252

C Configure the LAN Interface of the NAT routing protocol to use an address pool with a starting address of 207.46.179.4 and a mask of 255.255.255.252

D Configure the NAT routing protocol to use special ports on the public Interface Use private addresses 207.46.179.4 through 207.46.179.7

Answer: B

18. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network. The network consists of a Windows 2000 Server computer named ServerA and 45 Windows 2000 Professional computers. ServerA has a dial-up connection that connects to the Internet To allow all Windows 2000 Professional computers on the network to access the Internet through the dial-up connection of ServerA, you install and configure the Network Address Translation (NAT) routing protocol on ServerA All Windows 2000 Professional computers in the network are configured to use Automatic Private IP Addressing. There is no DHCP server on the network You want to configure the network to use IP addresses in the range of 172.16.65.1 through 172.16.65.250 for ServerA and the 45 Windows 2000 Professional computers How should you configure ServerA to accomplish this goal? (Choose all that apply)

A Assign an IP address of 172.16.65.1 to the LAN Interface of ServerA

B Enable Internet Connection Sharing on the dial-up connection of ServerA

C Configure Routing and Remote Access on ServerA to automatically assign IP addresses in the range of 172.16.65.2 through 172.16.65.250 to dial-in client computers

D Configure the NAT routing protocol on ServerA to automatically assign IP addresses in the range of 172.16.65.2 through 172.16.65.250 to computers on the private Interface

E Configure the public NAT Interface to use an address pool in the range of 172.16.65.2 through 172.16.65.250

Answer:

19. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network. The administrators of your Company’s Human Resources organizational unit (OU) want to be able to manage Encrypting File System (EFS) for the users in their department. The administrators of the human resources department belong to a group named HRAdmins which has full administrative privileges to the OU To make it possible for the members of HRAdmins to manage EFS for the users in their department, you install an Enterprise Certificate Authority (CA) for use by the entire company. However, the administrators of the human resources department notify you that they are unable to create a Group Policy that allows them to manage EFS for their department What should you do to enable the administrators of the Human Resources OU to create a Group Policy to manage EFS for the users in their department? (Choose two )

A Install a Subordinate Enterprise CA for use by the human resources department

B In the Certification Authority console for the CA, add a new policy setting for an EFS Recovery Agent certificate

C In the Certification Authority console for the CA, add a new policy setting for a Basic EFS certificate

D In Active Directory Sites and Services, grant the Enroll permission to the HRAdmins for the Enrollument Agent Certificate Template

E In Active Directory Sites and Services, grant the Enroll permission to the HRAdmins group for the EFS Recovery Certificate Template

Answer: BE

20. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network. Your Public Key Infrastructure consists of an offline root Certificate Authority (CA) and a number of subordinate CAs Your company is selling one of its divisions. This division has a subordinate CA that it uses to issue certificates. You want to ensure that once the division is sold, applications and other CAs on your network will not accept the former division’s certificates. You also want to ensure that you can implement your solution by using a minimum amount of administrative effort. What should you do?

A On the division’s subordinate CA, revoke all the certificates it has issued.

Publish the Certificate Revocation List (CRL) to a server on your network.

Uninstall the CA software and remove the CA files

B On the company’s root CA, revoke the certificate of the division’s subordinate CA

Publish the Certificate Revocation List (CRL)

Copy the EDB.LOG file from the root CA to its Certification Distribution Point on your network

C On the division’s subordinate CA, revoke the certificates it has issued.

Publish the Certificate Revocation List (CRL)

Copy the EDB.LOG file from the subordinate CA to the Certification Distribution Point on your network

Disconnect the CA from the network

D On the company’s root CA, revoke the certificate of the division a subordinate CA

Publish the Certificate Revocation List (CRL)

Copy the CRL file to the Certificate Distribution Point on your network

Answer: D

21. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network The network consists of one Windows 2000-based DHCP server, two routers, and 100 Windows 2000 Professional computers. The Windows 2000 Professional computers are distributed over four segments. The TCP/IP configuration of all the Windows 2000 Professional computers is provided by the DHCP server. The DHCP server is in one of the four segments, and has scopes that are configured for all four segments. The routers do not forward the DHCP requests from the Windows 2000 Professional computers. Each router has three Interfaces. You want to enable and continue the DHCP Relay Agent to allow all Windows 2000 Professional computers to receive an IP address from the DHCP server. On which Interfaces should you enable and continue the DHCP Relay Agent?

To answer click the Select and Place button and then drag the box to the appropriate router Interfaces The box may be used more than once

22. You are the network administrator for They Research. They Research’s network consists of 90 client computers and 50 portable computers, all running Windows 2000 Professional. Only 20 of the users of the portable computers will ever be in the office at the same time. To accommodate the number of users on the network. They Research purchases a subnetted Class B subnet with a 25-bit mask All users need access to the Internet while in the office. How should you configure DHCP?

A Create two scopes that have different lease durations

B Create manual reservations for all portable computer users

C Create one scope that has two user classes, each with a different lease duration

D Create one scope that has two vendor classes, each with a different lease Duration

Answer: C

23. You are the enterprise administrator for a Windows 2000 domain that contains Windows 2000 Professional computers. You install Windows 2000 DHCP server on a member server in the domain. The DHCP server is located on the same network segment as the Windows 2000 Professional computers. You create and activate a DHCP scope for the network segment. The Windows 2000 Professional computers are configured as DHCP client computers but they do not receive IP addresses What should you do so that each DHCP client computer receives an IP address?

A In the Device Manager console start the DHCP service

B Move the DHCP server to the same site as the Windows 2000 Professional computers

C In Active Directory, authorize the DHCP server

D Define a DHCP Option Class for the Windows 2000 Professional computers

Answer: C

24. You are the administrator of your company抯 network. The network consists of three network segments connected by a router as shown in the exhibit (Click the Exhibit button) You install the DHCP Server service on a Windows 2000 Server computer to automate the configuration of client computers on your network. You create scopes for each subnet’S range of addresses and activate each scope Users from Subnet 2 and Subnet 3 report that they cannot connect to the network. Users from Subnet 1 report no connectivity problems. You discover that computers on subnets 2 and 3 are not receiving a TCP/IP configuration from the DHCP server. What should you do to resolve this problem?

A Install the DHCP Relay Agent service on the DHCP server

B Install the DHCP Relay Agent service on a computer on each remote subnet

C Install the WINS Server service on a Windows 2000 Server computer and configure the client computers to use WINS to find the DHCP server

D Install the WINS Proxy Agent service on a computer on each remote subnet

E Install the DNS Server service on a Windows 2000 Server computer and configure the client computers to use PINS to find the DHCP server

F Install a DNS caching-only server on a computer on each remote subnet

Answer: B

25. You are the enterprise administrator of a Windows 2000 domain. All client computers in the domain are either Windows 98 computers or Windows 2000 computers Your Windows 2000 users run an Internet application that must access files from a Windows NT computer named WNT_101. None of your Windows 2000 computers can connect to WNT_101, but WNT_101 can connect to every Windows 2000 computer What should you do?

A Release and renew the IP address of WNT_101

B Select the Enable updates for DNS clients that do not support dynamic update check box

C Clear the Discard forward (name-to-address) lockups when lease expires check box

D Set the DNS zone for the Windows 2000 domain to Active Directory Integrated Primacy

Answer: B

26. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network. The network consists of two Windows 2000 Server computers named Serverl and Server2, and 75 Windows 2000 Professional computers. Serverl is a DHCP server. The TCP/IP configuration of all the Windows 2000 Professional computers is provided by the Serverl DHCP server. Your company’s technical support personnel belong to the HeIndsk global group. To allow the technical support personnel to respond to support calls more effectively you want them to have only Read access to the DHCP console and the DHCP leases information What should you do?

A Place the HeIndsk global group in the DHCP Users group

B Add the members of the HeIndsk global group to the built-in group named Pre-Windows 2000 Compatible Access

C In the DHCP console on the Serverl DHCP server, select Manage authorized servers and add the HeIndsk global group to the list

D On the Serverl DHCP server, grant the HeIndsk global group Read permission on the Systemrootfolder

Answer: A

27. You are the administrator of your company a network. The network consists of two Windows 2000 Server computers and 50 Windows 2000 Professional computers. You are using DHCP to automate the assignment of the TCP/IP configurations of the client computers. You configure the DHCP server to automatically update your DNS server’s forward and reverse lockup zone files with the DHCP client information. You discover that 15 of the client computers are referenced by PTR (pointer) records in the reverse lockup zone. There are no PTR records for the remaining 35 client computers How should you resolve this problem?

A Configure the client computers so that they register their A (host) records with the DNS server

B Configure the client computers so that they do not register their domain name with the DNS server

C Configure the DHCP server to enable updates for client computers that do not support dynamic update

D Configure the DHCP server to always update DNS, even if a client computer does not request it

Answer: D

28. You are the administrator of your company a network. The network consists of a single Windows 2000 domain and uses TCP/IP exclusively as its transport protocol. You use DHCP to assign addresses to your Windows 2000 Professional client computers. You add 20 new Windows 2000 Professional client computers to your network. Users report that occasionally they cannot access network resources located on servers. However workgroup resources are sometimes available. The inconsistency in server access does not appear to follow any pattern You inspect the TCP/IP configuration of a computer that is experiencing this problem and find that it is using the address 169.254.0.16. which is not a valid address in your network What should you do to resolve this problem?

A Configure the client computers to use only DHCP-assigned addresses

B Configure the client computers to only accept addresses from authorized DHCP servers

C Add enough new addresses to the existing DHCP scope to include the new client computers

D Create a new scope on the DHCP server to include the new client computers

Answer: C

29. You are the desktop support administrator for your company. You are responsible for ensuring that your company’s Windows 2000 Professional client computers have connectivity to the network and the Internet. All client computers use DHCP for their TCP/IP configuration The network administrators install a new T1 line and router for Internet access. This router must only be used by administrative staff. You want to configure the administrative staff’s client computers to use this new router. You want to ensure that nonadministrative staff users cannot gain access to the Internet through this router. You also want to ensure that each targeted client computer will only need to be configured once What should you do to achieve these goals?

A At each administrative client computer use the route add -f command to enter the new router information

B At each administrative client computer use the route add -p command to enter the new router information

C Enable the Perform Router Discovery option in the scope options for DHCP

D Enter the new router’s address in the Router solicitation Address option in the scope options for DHCP

Answer: B

30. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network. The network consists of 10 segments. The segments are connected by four Windows 2000 Server-based routers named Router1, Router2, Router3, and Router4. Routing and Remote Access is enabled as a router on these four servers. To exchange routing information, the four servers use RIP version 2 for IP. There are also other routers on the network that use RIP version 2 to exchange routing information. These other routers might have been erroneously configured, and consequently contain incorrect routing information. You want to ensure that Router1, Router2, Router3, and Router4 do not process routes received from any other router than Router1, Router2, Router3, and Router4. How can you configure the four routers to accomplish this goal? (Choose all that apply)

A Configure the RIP routing protocol on the four routers to use RIP peer filters.

List the other three routers as RIP peers

B Configure each RIP Interface on the four routers to unicast announcements to RIP neighbors.

List the other three routers as RIP neighboors.

C Configure each RIP Interface on the four routers to use password authentication.

Use the same password on all four routers

D On each RIP Interface on the four routers, configure route filters for outgoing routes.

Announce only routes in the route ranges of the network IDs that are connected to the four routers

Answer: A,C

31. You are the administrator of your company’s network. The network consists of two locations named East and West. Each location contains a Windows 2000 Server computer and 45 Windows 2000 Professional computers. The two servers are Windows 2000-based routers. The two routers are not connected directly to each other, but both are connected to a third router named Central. The Central router is administered by a different company The network is shown in the exhibit (Click the Exhibit button) Users in both locations want to provide multicast-based datacasting of information to the other location. You add the Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) routing protocol to both servers. However, the Central router does not support multicast forwarding or routing. How should you configured the network to allow IP multicast traffic to pass between the East and West locations ?

A On both servers create a default static route

Use the IP address of the other server as the gateway

B On both servers, assign the Interface for the Central router to the IGMP routing protocol

Run these Interfaces in IGMP proxy mode

C Create an IP-in-IP Interface between the two servers

Assign the IP-in-IP Interface to the IGMP routing protocol

Run the Interface in IGMP proxy mode

D Add the RIP of IP routing protocol to both servers

Assign the interface for the central router to the RIP routing protocol

Configure the servers to be unicast neighbors of each other

Answer: C

32. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network. The network consists of two segments connected by a router. Each segment contains two Windows 2000 Server computers and 50 Windows 2000 Professional computers. The network has one DHCP server that has active scopes for both segments. The IP addresses configured in the two scopes are 10.65.1.0/24 for one segment and 10.65 2.0/24 for the other segment. The IP address of the DHCP server is 10.65.1.2 The network is shown in the exhibit (Click the Exhibit button Users in the segment that does not have the DHCP server report that their Windows 2000 Professional computers are using IP addresses in the range of 169.254.0016. Windows 2000 Professional computers in the other segment use IP addresses in the range of 10.65.1.0/24 You want the Windows 2000 Professional computers in the segment that does not have the DHCP server to automatically use IP addresses in the range of 10.65.2.024. How should you configure the network to accomplish this goal?

A Enable and configured the DHCP Relay Agent service on the DHCP server

B Enable and configured the DHCP Relay Agent service on a server in the segment that does not have the DHCP server

C On the DHCP server configured a packet filter to receive IP packets that use the BOOTP port

D On a server in the segment that does not have the DHCP server, configured a packet filter to receive IP packets that use the BOOTP port

Answer: B

33. You are the network administrator for a branch office of a large company. Your network is connected to the company network by means of a Windows 2000 Routing and Remote Access two-way demand-dial connection over ISDN. To reduce costs, the ISDN link should only be used once each day to transfer sales information to or from the main office. This transfer should occur during nonbusiness hours. You discover that several times a day an ISDN link is initiated between the networks. You analyze the traffic and discover that it is composed of router announcement broadcasts. Which two actions should you take to prevent the link from being used during business hours? (Choose two)

A Schedule the demand-dial Interface to dial only during specified hours

B Schedule the demand-dial Interface to accept only inbound connections during specified hours

C Create a demand-dial filter on the demand-dial Interface

D Enable dynamic routing on the demand-dial Interface

E Create a remote access policy to restrict access to the port used by router broadcasts

F Create a remote access policy to restrict access to only the specific user who transfers information across the link

Answer: AC

34. You are the administrator of your company’s WAN. The network consists of 10 internal subnets in two physical sites connected by routers as shown in the exhibit (Click the Exhibit button ) You have an additional subnet that is configured for access to the Internet. The routers on the network will be multihomed Windows 2000 Server computers running Routing and Remote Access. You want to accomplish the following goals Administrative overhead for configuration of routing tables on each router will be minimized Broadcast traffic for configuration of routing tables on each router will be minimized In the event of a router failure, link redundancy within 10 minutes will be ensured Convergence times of less than one minute for all known routes on all routers will be ensured Internal routing information will never be exposed to external routers. You take the following actions Install RIP version 1 Configure RIP to use all Interfaces on all multihomed computers. Enable RIP authentication by specifying a password on each Interface. Which result or results do these actions produce? (Choose all that apply)

A Administrative overhead for configuration of routing tables on each router is minimized

B Broadcast traffic for configuration of routing tables on each router will be minimized

C In the event of a router failure, link redundancy within 10 minutes will be ensured

D Convergence times of less than one minute for all known routes on all routers will be ensured

E Internal routing information will never be exposed to external routers

Answer: ACE

35. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network. Your network has one primary internal DNS server and one primary external DNS server Your network has three secondary DNS servers that transfer zone information from the primary external DNS server. The secondary DNS servers are installed on two Windows 2000 Server computers and one Windows NT Server 4 0 computer The primary external DNS server is used to host records for your company’s Web and mail servers. It has only a limited number of resource records in its zone file. The Web server and the mail server have static IP addresses When you monitor the secondary DNS servers by using System Monitor, you notice a high number of hits when monitoring the counter DNS:Zone Transfer SOA Requests Sent. You want to minimize the bandwidth that is required for this traffic. What should you do? (Choose two)

A Upgrade the Windows NT Server 4 0 computer that is hosting the secondary DNS server to a Windows 2000 Server computer

B Configured the notify list on the primary external DNS server to notify the secondary DNS servers when there are changes to be replicated

C Reconfigure the primary external DNS server so that it does not allow dynamic updates

D Increase the value of the Refresh interval in the SOA (start of authority) record

E Decrease the value of the Refresh interval in the SOA (start of authority) Record

Answer: BD

36. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network. You have three Windows 2000 domain controllers in a single domain. Your primary DNS server is installed on a domain controller named dc1.contoso.com. You have two secondary DNS servers installed on member servers named srvl.contoso.com and srv2.contoso.com. You want to increase fault tolerance for your DNS infrastructure. You also want to optimize and simplify the management of replication and zone transfers on your network. How should you accomplish these goals?

A Promote the member servers that are hosting the DNS server to domain controllers

B Add srvl.contoso.com and srv2.contoso.com to the notify list on the primary DNS server

C Remove the DNS Server service from the member servers. Install the DNS Server service on the domain controllers. Convert the zone hosted by dc1.contoso.com to an Active Directory integrated zone

D Set the Time to Live (TTL) value in the SOA (start of authority) record on the primary DNS server to a low value

Answer: C

37. You are the administrator of one standard primary DNS server and two standard secondary DNS servers in a Windows 2000 domain. There are no other DNS servers on the network. The domain includes Windows 2000 Professional computers and Windows 98 computers The DNS zone for the Windows 2000 domain is configured to allow dynamic updates. All three DNS servers are located on domain controllers. You want client computers to be able to register with any DNS server What should you do?

A Change the zone type of the DNS zone for the Windows 2000 domain on all three DNS servers to Active Directory Integrated

B Change the settings on the standard primary DNS server to notify the two standard secondary DNS servers when the zone is updated

C Change the settings on the standard primary DNS server to allow zone transfers to only the two standard secondary DNS servers

D Change the dynamic update option on the standard primary DNS server to allow only secure updates

Answer: A

38. You are the network administrator for Miller TeAles. The network consists of one Windows 2000 domain named mullertexties.local. For security reasons you want to ensure that internal name resolution traffic never passes outside the network. You also want to ensure that external name requests are handled by an external DNS server. What should you do to accomplish these goals?

A Create a new standard primary zone for your local namespace and enter only internal addresses into the host table

B Create a new Active Directory integrated zone for your local namespace and enter only internal addresses into the host table

C Delete the root zone for your local namespace and configured all internal DNS servers to forward name resolution requests to the external DNS server

D Create a new root zone for the Internet and configured all internal DNS servers to forward all requests to this zone

Answer: C

39. You are the administrator of your company a network. Your network is configured as shown in the exhibit (Click the Exhibit button ) Your company has an intranet Web application named appz that utilizes resources on Internet Information Services (IIS). For performance reasons your company mirrors the content of appz on three Web servers IIS1, IIS2, and IIS3. You want to configured your network to allow access to the other Web servers in the event of failures. You want to configured DNS by using the newest possible resources What should you do?

A Configure one DNS server so that it has one DNS zone

Enable Round Robin

Create an A (host) record for appz for each Web server’s IP address

B Configure one DNS server so that it has one DNS zone

Disable Round Robin

Create an A (host) record for appz for each Web server’s IP address

C Configure three DNS servers so that each has one DNS zone

Enable Round Robin

Add an A (host) record for appz for each Web server on each DNS server

D Configure three DNS servers so that each has one DNS zone

Disable Round Robin

Add an A (host) record for appz for each Web server on each DNS server

Answer: A

40. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network. Your internal DNS server is located behind a firewall. When you test your DNS server by using the Monitoring tab on the server’s properties page, the DNS server passes the simple test but fails the recursive test. What should you do to resolve this problem?

A Run the ipconfig/registerdns command

B Delete the Systemroot.dns file

C Copy the Systemroot.dns file to the Systemroot.dns file

D Create a forward lookup zone for the root zone. Name the forward lookup zone “.”

E Create a reverse lookup zone for the subnet on which the resource records for the primary name server are located

Answer: D

41. You are the administrator of your company’s network. The network consists of one Windows 2000 domain. All servers and client computers are running Windows 2000. To facilitate name resolution and client access to resources on the servers, you have configured your DNS standard primary zone to include the addresses of all of your servers. You later add three new member servers to your network. Users report that they can find these servers in the directory but cannot access these servers You want to resolve this problem What should you do?

A Convert the DNS standard primary zone to an Active directory integrated zone

B Create SRV (service) records for each new server in the DNS zone

C Set the Allow Dynamic Updates setting for the DNS standard primary zone to Yes

D Set the Allow Dynamic Updates setting for the DNS standard primary zone to Only Secure Updates

Answer: C

42. You are the administrator of the blueswairlines.com domain. You maintain a local DNS server to provide name resolution within your Internet domain. Your DNS server runs on Windows 2000 Server. You have five Web servers which contain company and flight information in addition to the online flight reservation system. For load balancing purposes, each Web server is configured to maintain exactly the same content as all the other Web servers. All the Web servers respond to the host name www.blueswairlines.com. Customer feedback indicates that Web server response times are unacceptably slow. You monitor your Web servers and discover that only one of the five servers is servicing customer requests while the others are sitting idle You want to ensure load balancing and improve response time for customer Web requests. What can you do in the DNS Management console? (Choose two)

A Enable Round Robin in the DNS server’s properties

B Disable Round Robin in the DNS server’s properties

C Enable forwarders and configured them to point to each Web server

D Verify that A (host) records have been created for each Web server

E Verify that CNAME (canonical name) records have been created for each Web server

Answer: AD

43. You are the administrator of your company a network. You are configuring a Windows 2000 network for dial-up access. Your users need to access their computers from home. To increase security, your company issues smart cards to all users who have dial-up access. You need to configure your Routing and Remote Access server. What should you do? (Choose two )

A Select the Extensible authentication protocol (EAP) check box

B Select the Microsoft encrypted authentication version 2 (MS-CHAP v2) check box

C Install a computer certificate on the Routing and Remote Access server

D Install a smart card loser certificate on the Routing and Remote Access server

E Install a computer certificate on the dial up access client computer

Answer: AC

44. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 domain. The domain has a Windows 2000 member server computer named Delta. Routing and Remote Access is enabled for remote access on Delta. The domain is in native mode. For all user accounts, the dial-in permission is set to control access through remote access policies You want to allow all users in the domain to dial in during the workday. You also want to allow only members of the global security group named Support Staff to be able to dial in between 6:00 P.M. and 8:00 A.M. However, you do not want to allow the Support Staff members to be able to dial in when the log files are made each day between 7:00 A.M. and 8:00 A.M. You create four remote access policies on Delta as shown in the following table

Name Condition Permission Profile

Domain users all policy Windows-group=Domain users Access (default)

Domain users all policy Windows-group=Suppod staff Access (default)

Domain users 6-8 policy Day and Time=6PM-8AM

Windows- group=Domain users Deny (default)

Support staff 7-8 policy Day and Time=7AM-8AM

Windows-group=Soppod staff Deny (default)

To specify the appropriate access control for Delta, click the Select and Place button, and then drag the remote access policies and place them in the correct order. Answer: 4-2-3-1 45. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 domain. The domain has a Windows 2000 member server computer named Helsinki. Routing and Remote Access is enabled for remote access on Helsinki. Users in the domain are able to dial in to the network by using their Windows 2000 Professional computers Your company has a group named Sales. You want to allow members of the Sales group to use a smart card for remote authentication. The dial in permission for all users in the Sales group is set to Control access through Remote Access Policy You create a new remote access policy named Sales Access. This remote access policy grants remote access to members of the Sales group any time of the day. This remote access policy is the first policy on the list of remote access policies on Helsinki Members of the Sales group are able to dial in to the network, but they report that they are unable to use the smart card for remote authentication You want to ensure that members of the Sales group are able to use the smart card authentication method. What should you do?

A In Active Directory add Helsinki to the Pre-Windows 2000 Compatible Access group

B Enable EAP as an authentication method on the Helsinki remote access server and the Windows 2000 remote access client computers. Enable EAP in the profile of the Sales Access remote access policy

C For all members of the Sales group, select Store passwords using reversible encryption

D For all members of the Sales group, configured the user account to be trusted for delegation

Answer: B

46. You are the administrator of your company’s network. The network consists of one Windows 2000 domain running in native mode. You are not running Certificate Services in the domain Your company is a sales organization and has 150 salespeople. When these salespeople are out of the office, they require file and print services, e-mail and access to the company’s product and inventory database. These salespeople belong to a group named SalesMobile Your company has dedicated T1 access to the Internet. Your company also uses a virtual private network (VPN) to reduce the costs and hardware required to support the salespeople You want to accomplish the following goals Required network resources will be accessible to all salespeople Connections to the network will be made only by salespeople Sensitive company data will be kept confidential over the VPN connections. Access to the network will only take place during business hours. All salespeople will be able to connect to the network simultaneously You take the following actions. Install Routing and Remote Access on a Windows 2000 Server computer and configured virtual private networking. Grant the salespeople the Allow Access dial in permission. Edit the default remote access policy to grant remote access permission. Edit the default remote access profile to require strong encryption of data Which result or results do these actions produce? (Choose all that apply)

A Required network resources are accessible to all salespeople

B Connections to the network are made only by salespeople

C Sensitive company data is kept confidential over the VPN connections

D Access to the network only takes place during business hours

E All salespeople are able to connect to the network simultaneously

Answer: AC

47. You are the administrator of your company’s network. Your company employs account executives who need access to the latest company data when they are traveling. You want to ensure that your company will establish the network connection for your account executives regardless of where the call originates Your company also allows vendors access to the network by Routing and Remote Access to submit purchase orders. To ensure network security, your company wants to specify the locations from which vendors can connect You want to configured your company a Routing and Remote Access server to facilitate access for account executives and vendors. Which three actions should you take to ensure this configuration? (Choose three)

A Set the Callback option to Always Callback to for the account executives

B Set the Callback option to Set By Caller for the account executives

C Set the Callback option to No Callback for the vendors

D Set the Callback option to Always Callback to for the vendors

E Set the Callback option to Set By Caller for the vendors

F Enable Link Control Protocol (LCP) extensions

G Enable EAP

Answer: BDF

49. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 domain. The domain has a Windows 2000 member server computer named Vegas. Routing and Remote Access is enabled for remote access on Vegas. Some of the remote access client computers require the use of CHAP You enable CHAP on Vegas. You also configured the appropriate remote access policy to use CHAP. However, users who require CHAP report that they are not able to dial in to Vegas What should you do?

A Configured Vegas to prohibit the use of LAN Manager authentication

B Configured Vegas to disable the use of Link Control Protocol (LCP) extensions

C Configured the user accounts by selecting Store passwords using reversible encryption. Set the user passwords to change the next time each user logs on

D Configured the user accounts to use a static IP address when they dial in to the network

Answer: C

50. You are the administrator of your company’s network. You are configuring your users’ portable computers to allow users to connect to the company network by using Routing and Remote Access. You test the portable computers on the LAN and verify that they can successfully connect to resources on the company network by name. When you test the connection through Remote Access all of the portable computers can successfully connect but they cannot access files on computers on different segments by using the computer name What should you do to resolve this problem?

A Set the authentication method to Allow remote systems to connect without authentication

B Enable the computer account for each portable computer

C Change the computer name on each portable computer

D Install the DHCP Relay Agent on the Remote Access server

Answer: D

51. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 domain. The domain has a Windows 2000 member server computer named Houston. Routing and Remote Access is enabled for remote access on Houston. The domain also has a DHCP server. The domain is in native mode Users in the domain dial in to the network by using Windows 2000 Professional portable computers. The configuration of the dial up connection on the Windows 2000 Professional computers is set to obtain an IP address automatically. You do not want to change this configuration For administrative purposes, you want to designate a fixed IP address for each of the users. All users should receive a different fixed IP address when a dial up connection is made How should you configured the network to accomplish this goal?

A On the Houston Remote Access Service, create a static address pool so that it has only the IP address of the remote access dial in Interface. Use a mask of 0.0.0.0

B On the Houston Remote Access Service, create a static address pool for IP address assignment. Use a mask of 255.255.255.255

C On the DHCP server, create a reservation that uses a specific IP address for each user

D In the Active Directory Users and Computers console, assign a static IP address for each user

Answer: D

52. You are the administrator of your company抯 network. You are configuring remote access services in your Windows 2000 domain to allow mobile users to access network resources. You want the inbound client computers to receive IP address and option configurations from your DHCP server. You configure your remote access server to allow DHCP to assign addresses and configurations to the client computers. Users report that they cannot access network resources by using the server name or by searching Active Directory. You investigate and find that when you connect to the remote access server, your client computer is receiving its IP address configuration but none of the DHCP options. Internal client computers are not experiencing this problem. What should you do to resolve this problem?

A Enable IP routing in the remote access server’s Properties dialog box

B Disable IP routing in the remote access server’s Properties dialog box

C Configure a static address pool on the remote access server

D Configure the remote access server to act as a DHCP Relay Agent

Answer: D

53. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 domain named contoso.com. The domain has a Windows 2000 member server computer named Ras1 and a Windows 2000 based DHCP Server computer named Dora. Routing and Remote Access is enabled for remote access on Ras1. The network has two DNS servers that use IP addresses of 10.1.5.2 and 10.1.5.3 Ras1 is configured to use DHCP to assign IP addresses to the remote access client computers. The configuration of the setting options on the DHCP server is shown in the following window. The DHCP scope does not have any client computer reservations When remote access client computers dial in to Ras1, they receive an IP address from the DHCP scope range but they do not receive the DNS address configured in the DHCP scope. Instead, the remote access client computers receive a DNS server address of 10.1.5.2. You want the remote access client computers to receive the DNS option from the DHCP server. How should you configure the network to accomplish this goal?

A Configure the remote access client computers to enable DHCP on the dial up connection

B Configure Ras1 to use Windows Authentication

C Install and configure the DHCP Relay Agent routing protocol on the Internal Interface of Ras1

D On the DHCP server, configure the DNS scope option of 10.1.5.3 for the Default Routing and Remote Access user class

Answer: C

54. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 domain. The domain has a Windows 2000 member server computer named Ras5. Routing and Remote Access is enabled for remote access on Pas5. The domain also has a Windows NT 4.0 member server computer named Ras4. Ras4 is running Remote Access Service (RAS). The domain is in mixed mode. Users in the domain use Windows 2000 Professional computers to dial in to the network through Ras4 or Ras5. However, Ras4 is not able to validate remote access credentials of domain accounts. How should you configure the network to enable the Windows NT 4.0 Ras4 member server computer to validate remote access domain users?

A Change the domain from mixed mode to native mode

B Add the Ras4 computer account to the RAS and IAS Servers group

C Add the Everyone group to the Pre-Windows 2000 Compatible Access group

D Create a remote access policy that has the Ras4 computer account as a condition.

Grant remote access permission if the condition matches the properties of the dial in attempt

Answer :C

55.You are the administrator of your company’s network. To facilitate connections for remote administration, you install Routing and Remote Access on a Windows 2000 domain controller. You want to accomplish the following goals: Only administrators will have dial up access. Dial up connections will be accepted only from 4:00 PM to 7:00 AM Connections will be forcibly disconnected after 20 minutes of inactivity. All connections will encrypt all communications. Connections will be limited to one hour. You take the following actions. Set the level or levels of encryption to No Encryption and Basic. Add Domain Admins to the Windows Group Policy condition. Configure the rest of the remote access policy as shown in the exhibit (Click the Exhibit button). Which result or results do these actions produce? (Choose all that apply)

A Only administrators have dial-up access

B Dial up connections are accepted only between 4:00 PM and 7:00 AM

C Connections are forcibly disconnected after 20 minutes of inactivity

D All connections encrypt all communications

E Connections are limited to one hour

Answer: A

56. You are the administrator of your company’s network. Your company has branch offices in New York and Paris. Because each branch office will support its own Routing and Remote Access server, you implement a Remote Authentication Dial In User Service (RADIUS) server to centralize administration. You remove the default remote access policy. You need to implement one company policy that requires all dial up communications to use 40bit encryption. You want to configure your network to require secure communications by using the least amount of administrative effort. What should you do? (Choose two)

A Create one remote access policy on each Routing and Remote Access server

B Create one remote access policy on the RADIUS server

C Set encryption to Basic in the remote access policy or policies

D Set encryption to Strong in the remote access policy or policies

E Enable the Secure Server IPSec policy on the RADIUS server

F Enable the Server IPSec policy on the RADIUS server

Answer: BC

57. You are the administrator of your company’s Routing and Remote Access servers. Your company’s administrators are able to dial in to the company’s network to perform remote monitoring and administration. This remote monitoring and administration requires an excessive amount of network bandwidth. You want to allow only administrators to use multiple phone lines and you want to limit all other users to a single phone line. You want to configure multiple phone line network connections to adapt to changing bandwidth conditions. When the phone lines fall below 50 percent capacity, you want to reduce the number of phone lines utilized. You also want to allow all users the ability to connect to the network by Routing and Remote Access. No default remote access policies currently exist What should you do? (Choose three)

A Create one remote access policy on the Routing and Remote Access server

B Create two remote access policies on the Routing and Remote Access server

C Allow Multilink

D Decrease the maximum number of pods used by the Routing and Remote Access server

E Select the Require Bandwidth Allocation Protocol (BAP) for the Dynamic Multilink Requests check box

F Increase the maximum number of dial up sessions

Answer: BCE

58. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network. Some of the members of your company’s graphics department use Macintosh computers and are not using Internet Explorer as their browser. These users inform you that they cannot request valid user certificates from your Enterprise Certificate Authority (CA). You want to make it possible for these users to request certificates by using Web based enrollment. What should you do?

A In the Internet Information Services (IIS) console, access the properties for the CertSrv virtual directory On the Directory Security tab, set the authentication type to Basic Authentication

B In the Policy Settings container in the CA console for your CA, add a new Enrollment Agent certificate

C Edit the ACL on the user certificate template to grant the graphics department users enroll access

D In the Internet Information Services (IIS) console, access the properties for the CertSrv virtual directory On the Directory Security tab, set the authentication type to Integrated Windows Authentication

Answer: A

59. You are the administrator of a Web server hosted on the Internet that is running on a Windows 2000 Server computer. Your company’s Web developers have developed applications that download ActiveX controls automatically to your customers browsers. You discover that the default security settings on your customers browsers are preventing the ActiveX controls from being downloaded automatically. You want to facilitate the downloading of ActiveX controls from your Web server to the Internet clients What should you do?

A Install an Enterprise Subordinate Certificate Authority (CA) that uses a commercial CA as the parent

Create a policy on the CA that allows the Web developers to request a certificate for code signing

B Install an Enterprise Certificate Authority (CA)

Create a policy on the CA that allows the Web developers to request a certificate for trust list signing

C Install an Enterprise Subordinate Certificate Authority (CA) that uses a commercial CA as the parent

Create a policy on the CA that allows the Web developers to request a certificate for trust list signing

D Install an Enterprise Certificate Authority (CA)

Create a policy on the CA that allows the Web developers to request a certificate for code signing

Answer: A

60.You are the administrator of your company’s network. The network consists of one Windows 2000 domain. All servers and client computers are running Windows 2000. To facilitate name resolution and client access to resources on the servers, you have configured your DNS standard primary zone to include the addresses of all of your servers. You later add three new member servers to your network. Users report that they can find these servers in the directory but cannot access these Servers. You want to resolve this problem. What should you do?

A Convert the DNS standard primary zone to an Active directory integrated zone

B Create SRV (served) records for each new server in the DNS zone

C Set the Allow Dynamic Updates setting for the DNS standard primary zone to Yes

D Set the Allow Dynamic Updates setting for the DNS standard primary zone to Only Secure Updates

Answer: C

61.You are the administrator of your company’s network. You configure a Windows 2000 Server computer as the DNS server for your network. You create both standard primary forward lookup and reverse lookup zones. You discover that when you use the nslookup utility, you cannot resolve host names from IP addresses on your network. You also discover that when you run the Tracet.exe utility, you receive the following error message: Unable to resolve target system name What should you do?

A Create A (host) records in the forward lookup zone

B Create A (host) records in the reverse lookup zone

C Create PTR (pointer) records in the forward lookup zone

D Create PTR (pointer) records in the reverse lookup zone

Answer: D

62.You are the administrator of your company’s network. To allow fault tolerance for your external DNS server, your Internet service provider (ISP) hosts a DNS server on its UNIX server. The UNIX server is used as the secondary DNS server for your primary external DNS server. Users inform you that they are not able to connect to the URL of the company’s Web server. You investigate and discover that this inability to connect occurs during times when your primary external DNS server is unavailable. What should you do to resolve this problem?

To answer click the appropriate check box in the Advanced tab of the london Properties dialog box

63.You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network that consists of three subnets. For load balancing purposes, each Web server on your network is configured to maintain exactly the same content as all the other Web servers. You want to configure your DNS server to allow users to type a host name in their browsers to connect to the Web server that is on the same subnet. The host name that all users type will be identical regardless of the subnet they are on. How should you configure your DNS server?

A On the primary DNS server, create three A (host) records that map the same host name to the IP address of the Web server on each subnet

B On the primary DNS server, create one A (host) record that is located on the same subnet as the DNS server

On the secondary DNS servers on the two remaining subnets, edit the zone file for the domain on each DNS server to include an A (host) record for the Web server on each subnet

C On the primary DNS server create three A (host) records that map a different host name to the IP address of the Web server on each subnet

D On the primary DNS server create one A (host) record for one Web server and two CNAME (canonical name) records for the remaining two Web servers

Answer: A

64.You are the administrator of your company’s network. Your Windows 2000 Server computer named Srv2 cannot communicate with your UNIX server named Srv1. Srv2 can communicate with other computers on your network. You try to ping Srv1 but you receive the following error message: Unknown host Srv1. You create an A (host) record that has the correct name and IP address. However when you try to ping Srv1 again you receive the same error message What should you do to resolve this problem?

A Restart the DNS server

B Clear the DNS Server Cache

C Run the ipconfig/registerdns command on Srv2

D Run the ipconfig/flushdns command on Srv2

Answer: D

65.You are the network administrator for Woodgrove Bank. Your network is configured as shown in the exhibit (Click the Exhibit button) Srv2 and Srv3 are configured as caching only servers. Both servers forward requests to Srvl. Srvl is configured as the primary server for the woodgroveBank.com domain. Users on networks 10.107.2.0 and 10.107.3.0 frequently use an Internet application that gathers stock quotes from various servers on the woodgrovebank.com domain. You want to reduce DAS network traffic. What should you do?

A Increase the Time to Live (TTL) for the SOA (start of authority) record on Srvl

B Increase the Time to Live (TTL) for the SOA (start of authority) record on Srv2 and Srv3

C Set the Server Optimization option on Srv2 and Srv3 to Maximize data throughput for network applications

D Increase the forward time out seconds on Srv2 and Srv3

Answer: A

66.You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network. The network consists of 30 Windows 2000 Professional computers and two Windows 2000 Server computers named Athens and Boston. Athens has a permanent cable modem connection to the Internet. All Windows 2000 Professional computers on the network are configured to use Automatic Private IP Addressing (APIPA). The network does not contain a DHCH server. To allow all Windows 2000 Professional computers on the network to access the Internet through the cable modem connection of Athens, you install and configure the network Address Translation (NAT) routing protocol on Athens. You decide to use IP addresses in the range of 192.168.40.1 through 192.168.40.50 for the network. Athens is configured to use an IP address of 192.168.40.1 Boston is a Web server configured with an IP address of 192.168.40.2 and a default gateway of 192.168.40.1 Your Internet service provider (ISP) has allocated two IP addresses 207.46.179.16 and 207.46.179.17 to your network. The network is shown in the exhibit (Click the Exhibit button) You want to allow Internet users from outside your internal network to use an IP address of 207.46.179.17 to access the resources on Boston through the NAT service on Athens How should you configure the network to accomplish this goal?

A Configure Athens with a static route on the private Interface of the NAT routing protocol

Use a destination address of 207.46.179.17, a network mask of 255.255.255.255 and a gateway of 192.168.40.2

B Configure Boston with a static route on the LAN Interface

Use a destination address of 192.168.40.1, a network mask of 255.255.255.255 and a gateway of 207.46.179.17

C Configure the LAN Interface of Boston to use multiple IP addresses

Assign the additional IP address of 207.46.179.17 to the Interface

D Configure the public Interface of the NAT routing protocol to use an address pool with a starting address of 207.46.179.16 and a mask of 255.255.255.254

Reserve a public IP address of 207.46.179.17 for the private IP address of 192.168.40.2

Answer: D

67.You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network. The network consists of a Windows 2000 Server computer named SrvA, and 30 Windows 2000 Professional computers. SrvA has a dial up connection that connects to the Internet All Windows 2000 Professional computers on the network are configured to use Automatic Private IP Addressing (APIPA). There is no DHCP server on the network SrvA is configured to use an IP address of 192.168.0.1. Routing and Remote Access and all the ports on SrvA are enabled for demand dial routing. The network Address Translation (NAT) routing protocol is added You want to allow all Windows 2000 Professional computers on the network to access the Internet through a translated demand dial connection on SrvA. How should you configure the network (Choose four)

A Create a new demand dial Interface for the local area connection

B Create a new demand dial Interface for the dial up connection

C Add a public and a private Interface to the NAT routing protocol

D Configure the IP address of the Internet service provider (ISP) as the default gateway on the private Interface

E Add a default static route that uses the public Interface

F Configure the NAT routing protocol to enable network address translation assignment and name resolution

G Configure the public NAT Interface with an address pool of 192.168.0.1

Answer:

68.You are configuring a Windows 2000 Professional computer as a client computer in your company’s network. The servers in the network consist of a mix of Windows 2000 Server computers Windows NT Server 4.0 computers and Netware 3.11 and 4.1 servers You install and configure both TCP/IP and NWLINK IPX/SPX on the Windows 2000 Professional computer. You also install the client software for both Microsoft and Netware network. When you attach the computer to the network, you can communicate with all of the Windows based servers and the Netware 4.1 servers, but you cannot see the Netware 3.11 servers in My network Places. You also cannot map drives by using either Microsoft specific or Netware specific commands. What should you do to correct this problem?

A Edit the NetworkNumber value in the registry to specify the network number for the Netware 3.11 servers

B Edit the NetworkNumber value in the registry to specify the network number for the Netware 4.1 servers

C Edit the NetworkNumber value in the registry to specify the network number for both the Netware 3.11 and the Netware 4.1 servers

D Edit the PKTType value in the registry to include the hexadecimal value for the 802.2 frame type

E Edit the PKTType value in the registry to include the hexadecimal value for the 802.3 frame type

F Edit the PKTType value in the registry to include the hexadecimal values for both the 802.2 and 802.3 frame types

Answer: F

69.You are the administrator of a mixed Windows NT 4.0 and Windows 2000 network. All of the Windows 2000 Server computers in your network are member servers of a single Windows NT 4.0 domain. You want to use two of these servers to test configurations of IPSec that are using the Kerberos authentication protocol What should you do?

A On both servers create a new IPSec policy

Configure a rule so that it will not use a tunnel

Specify shared secret key authentication

Assign the new policy

B On one of your servers, install a stand alone root Certificate Authority (CA)

Create a digital certificate for both servers

On both servers, create a new IPSec policy and specify the issued certificate for authentication

Assign the new policy

C On both servers create a new IPSec policy

Specify the tunnel end point as the IP address of the partner server and specify a shared secret key to use for authentication

Assign the new policy

D Promote one of the servers to a domain controller

Assign the domain controller the default Secure Server IPSec policy

Assign the other server the default Client IPSec policy

Answer: D

70.You are an administrator of your company’s network. Your Web server is configured to run a third party Web application for users on your network. Another network administrator in your company has recently made some configuration changes to secure the server. Users recant that each time they try to connect to a secure Web page stored on the Web server, they receive the following error message Web page requested is not available. Users have no problem connecting to FTP and you have verified that the Web service has started. You want to discover why users are receiving the error message. What should you do to diagnose this problem?

A Verify that port 21 and port 20 are permitted in your TCP/IP filter

B Verify that port 443 is permitted in your TCP/IP filter

C Verify that the correct NTFS file permissions are on the Web pages

D Verify that port 80 is permitted in your TCP/IP filter

Answer: B

71.You are the administrator of your company’s network. Your network is configured as shown in the exhibit (Click the Exhibit button) You are configuring your Windows 2000 Server computer that runs Internet Information Services (IIS). Your server uses the IP address of 131.107.2.2 to support Internet users. Your server uses the IP address of 10.1.1.2 to support an intranet application You want to configure your server to permit only Web communications from the Internet. You also want to configure your server to allow access to shared folders and other resources for users on the intranet. What should you do? (Choose two)

A Enable a TCP/IP filter

Permit only port 80 on the network adapter that uses the IP address of 131.107.2.2

B Enable a TCP/IP filter

Permit only port 21 and port 20 on the network adapter that uses the IP address of 131.107.2.2

C Permit all ports on the network adapter that uses the IP address of 131.107.2.2

D Enable a TCP/IP filter

Permit only port 80 on the network adapter that uses the IP address of 10.1.1.2

E Enable a TCP/IP filter

Permit only port 21 and port 20 on the network adapter that uses the IP address of 10.1.1.2

F Permit all ports on the network adapter that uses the IP address of 10.1.1.2

Answer: BF

73.You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network. You need to assign network ID numbers and host addresses to the computers in one of your company’s branch offices. A single route to the branch office is advertised as 192.168.16.0/21. The branch office has 150 computers on a single subnet of 192.168.16.0/24. However, the company wants to be able to add up to another 2000 computers to the branch office. You want to be able to accommodate all computers in the branch office, while also taking advantage of route summarization. Which steps should you take to achieve this goal? (Choose all that apply)

A In the branch office add another route advertised as 192.168.32.0/22

B In the branch office add additional network ID numbers 192.168.33.0/24-192.168.39.0/24

C In the branch office add additional network ID numbers 192.168.17.0/24- 192.168.23.0/24

D In the branch office add additional network ID numbers 192.168.24.0/24- 192.168.31.0/24

E Change the advertisement to the branch office to 192.168.16.0/20

Answer: CDE

74.You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network that has a main office and one branch office. You use PPTP to connect the main office to the branch office. You want to verify that the strongest possible level of data encryption is supports for the connection. What should you do?

A In the Routing and Remote Access consoles, verify that the dial in profile used to establish the connection between the two offices allows only MS-CHAP

B In the properties of the Routing and Remote Access server objects in the Routing and Remote Access consoles, verify that the Extensible Authentication Protocol is using MD5-CHAP

C In the properties of the PPTP Interfaces in the Routing and Remote Access consoles, verify that MS-CHAP v2 is being used as the authentication method

D In the properties of the PPTP Interfaces in the Routing and Remote Access consoles, verify that Password Authentication Protocol (PAP) is being used as the authentication method

Answer: C

75.You are the administrator of your company’s network. To monitor the traffic on your network, you install network Monitor. You need to monitor the source IP address, destination IP address and destination port number of every TCP/IP frame on the network. You want to log this information for a period of three hours. What should you do? (Choose two)

A On the Capture Buffer Settings menu, increase the buffer size

B On the Capture Buffer Settings menu, decrease the buffer size

C On the Capture Buffer Settings menu, increase the frame size

D On the Capture Buffer Settings menu, decrease the frame size

E Change the Temporary Capture Directory

Answer: AD

76.You are the administrator of your company’s network. The network consists of five subnets that are connected by a BOOTP relay-enabled router. There are 50 Windows2000 Server computers and 1000 Windows 2000 Professional client computers distributed approximately evenly across the five subnets. There are also 25 UNIX servers and 100 DHCP enabled network printers on the network. You want to accomplish the following goals: The correct assignment of IP addresses to each client computer on each subnet will be automated. Address conflicts between client computers and servers will be prevented. Correct scope options will be applied to each client computer on each subnet. Client computers that are not in use will be prevented from keeping an IP address for more than three days. Each network printer will always receive the same IP address. You take the following actions: Install the DHCP Server service on a Windows 2000 Server computer. Create five scopes, each containing the address range for a specific subnet. In the DHCP console set optional client configurations for each scope in the Scope Options container. Exclude the range of addresses in use by the servers. Exclude the range of addresses in use by the network printers. Which result or results do these actions produce? (Choose all that apply)

A The correct assignment of IP addresses to each client computer on each shored is automated

B Address conflicts between client computers and servers are prevented

C Correct setting options are applied to each client computer on each shored

D Client computers that are not in use are prevented from keeping an IP address for more than three days

E Each network printer always receives the same IP address

Answer: ABC

77.You are the enterprise administrator of a Windows 2000 domain. The domain has three Windows 2000 Server computers named Athens, Barcelona and Cairo and 90 Windows 2000 Professional computers. Your network consists of three segments connected by a router. Each segment contains one of the servers. The 90 Windows 2000 Professional computers are evenly distributed over the three segments Athens is a DHCP server. The TCP/IP configuration of all the Windows 2000 Professional computers on the three segments is provided by the Athens DHCP server. The DHCP server has three scopes, one for each segment. The lease time for all three settings is eight days For performance reasons you want to move the DHCP Server service from Athens to Barcelona. You take the following actions. On Athens stop and disable the DHCP Server service. On Barcelona install authorize and stop the DHCP Server service. Copy the entire Systemrootfolder from Athens to Barcelona. You want to configure Barcelona to use the setting information and the leased addresses currently in use by the Windows 2000 Professional computers. What should you do next on Barcelona? (Choose two)

A Enable the DHCP Relay Agent. Use a boot threshold of 0 seconds

B Use the Jetpack utility to manually repair the DHCP database

C Use the Regedt32.exe registry editor to restore the DHCP registry configuration from the Systemrootlocation

D Copy the Systemroot.chk file to the dhcp.mdb file

E Start the DHCP server and reconcile all scopes

F Start the DHCP server and create a new superscope that contains the three original setting ranges

Answer: CE

78.You are the administrator of your company’s network. The network is configured as shown in the exhibit (Click the Exhibit button). All client computers on your network receive their IP address information from the DHCP server. The user on Prof4 accesses most of his network resources from computers on SegmentA. The users on Prof5 and Prof6 access most of their resources from computers on SegmentC. You want to configure your DHCP server to issue gateway addresses to Prof4 Prof5 and Prof6. You want these gateway addresses to offer optimum access time. How should you configure your DHCP server? (Choose two)

A Create a reservation for Prof4. For this reservation, configure the router option that has the value of 172.16.64.2

B Create a reservation for Prof5 and a reservation for Prof6. For each reservation configure the router option that has the value of 172.16.64.2

C Configure the DHCP server’s Predefined Router option so that it has the value of 172.16.64.2

D Configure the DHCP server a Predefined Router option so that it has the value of 172.16.64.1

E On the DHCP server’s scope for SegmentB, configure the Router option so that it has the value of 172.16.64.2

F On the DHCP server a scope for SegmentB, configure the Router option so that it has the value of 172.16.64.1

Answer: AF

79.You are the administrator of your company’s network. The network consists of 10 Windows 2000 Server computers 100 Windows 2000 Professional computers and 150 Windows NT Workstation computers. For workgroup collaboration and document sharing, all client computers have file and print sharing services enabled. You are using DHCP to automate the TCP/IP configuration of all client computers. You want to accomplish the following goals: All client computers will be able to be located on the network by the network’s fully qualified domain name. A (host) records for all client computers will be automatically added to the DNS zone files PTR (pointer) records for reverse name lockup for all client computers will be automatically added to the DNS zone files. A records and PTR records will be automatically removed from the DNS zone files when the DHCP lease expires You take the following actions: Configure the DHCP server to always update client computer information in DNS Configure the DHCP server to discard forward lockups when the lease expires Configure the DHCP server to update DNS for client computers that do not support dynamic updates Configure the DHCP scope to configure the domain name for all DHCP client computers Which result or results do these actions produce? (Choose all that apply)

A All client computers are able to be located on the network by the network a fully qualified domain name

B A records for all client computers are automatically added to the DNS zone files

C PTR records for reverse name lockup for all client computers are automatically added to the DNS zone files

D A records and PTR records are automatically removed from the DNS zone files when the DHCP lease expires

Answer: ABCD

80.You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network. The network consists of two Windows 2000 Server computers named Atlanta and Orlando and 350 Windows 2000 Professional computers. Orlando is a DHCP server. The TCP/IP configuration of all the Windows 2000 Professional computers is provided by the DHCP server. Atlanta and Orlando have IP addresses that are manually configured. Atlanta frequently hosts multicast based video and audio conferences. You want to dynamically allocate multicast addresses. How should you configure the networks?

A On the DHCP server, create and activate a scope so that it has a range of Class D addresses

B On Atlanta, configure Routing and Remote Access to enable the IGMP routing protocol in proxy mode on the LAN Interface

C On the Windows 2000 Professional computers, enable router discovery

D On the Windows 2000 Professional computers, add a route for network destination 224.0.0.0 and mask 224.0.0.0

Answer: A

81.You are the administrator of your company’s network. The network consists of 10 Windows 2000 Server computers 100 Windows 2000 Professional computers and 150 Windows NT Workstation computers. For workgroup collaboration and document sharing, all client computers have file and print sharing services enabled. You are using DHCP to automate the TCP/IP configuration of all client computers. You want to accomplish the following goals: All client computers will be able to be located on the network by the network’s fully qualified domain name. A (host) records for all client computers will be automatically added to the DNS zone files PTR (pointer) records for reverse name lockup for all client computers will be automatically added to the DNS zone files. A records and PTR records will be automatically removed from the DNS zone files when the DHCP lease expires You take the following actions: Configure the DHCP server to never update client information in DNS. Configure the DHCP server to discard forward lockups when the lease expires. Configure the DHCP scope to configure the domain name for all DHCP client computers. Which result or results do these actions produce? (Choose all that apply)

A All client computers are able to be located on the network by the network a fully qualified domain name

B A records for all client computers are automatically added to the DNS zone files

C PTR records for reverse name lockup for all client computers are automatically added to the DNS zone files

D A records and PTR records are automatically removed from the DNS zone files when the DHCP lease expires

Answer: D

82.You are the administrator of your company’s network. The network consists of one Windows 2000 domain that has 10 Windows 2000 Server computers and 500 Windows 2000 Professional client computers. You want all client computers to receive their TCP/IP configuration from DHCP. You install the DHCP Server service on one of your Windows 2000 Server computers and create and activate a scope of addresses Users report that they cannot connect to the network. You discover that none of the client computers are receiving TCP/IP configurations from DHCP. What should you do to resolve this problem?

A Stop and restart the DHCP Server service on the DHCP server

B Restart all client computers

C Authorize the DHCP server in Active Directory

D Add a DNS host record for the DHCP server

Answer: C

83.You are the administrator of your company’s network The network consists of 10 Windows 2000 Server computers 200 Windows 2000 Professional computers 250 Windows 98 computers and 25 UNIX workstation computers running SMB server software. The network runs only TCP/IP as its transport protocol. You implement WINS in the network for NetBIOS name resolution. Users of the Windows based client computers report that they cannot access resources based on the UNIX computers by NetBIOS name. There is no problem accessing Windows based resources by NetBIOS name. What should you do to resolve this problem?

A Install a WINS proxy agent on one of the UNIX computers

B Install a WINS proxy agent on one of the Windows based computers

C On the WINS server, create static mappings for the UNIX computers

D On the WINS server, create static mappings for the Windows based computers

Answer: C

84.You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network. The network has seven Windows 2000 based WINS servers and each is in a separate location. Because network users frequently log on at different locations, you want to configure the seven WINS servers to have a convergence time of less than one hour. How should you configure the seven WINS servers to accomplish this goal?

A Create a display of the seven WINS servers in a circular arrangement

Configure each WINS server as a push/pull partner with the two WINS servers beside it in the circle

Use a replication interval of 25 minutes

B Designate one of the WINS servers as the central WINS server

Configure the other six WINS servers as push/pull partners with the central WINS server

Configure the central WINS server as a push/pull partner with the other six WINS servers

Use a replication interval of 25 minutes

C Configure each WINS server to automatically configure the other WINS servers as its replication partners

Use the default interval time for automatic partners configuration

D Configure each WINS server to use a renew interval of 50 minutes

Use the default value for the verification interval

Answer: B

85.You are the administrator of your company’s network. The network consists of a single Windows 2000 domain. The network has Windows 2000 Server computers Windows 2000 Professional computers and Windows NT Workstation 4.0 computers distributed across two IP subnets as shown in the exhibit (Click the Exhibit button) Two Windows 2000 domain controllers are located on Subnet1. Each domain controller is also a DNS server hosting an Active Directory integrated zone. You implement WINS for Netbios name resolution on your network. WINS is installed on a server on Subnet2 Users of the Windows NT Workstation 4.0 computers on Subne2 report that they are receiving the following error message: Domain Controller cannot be located. Subsequently, these users cannot be validated on the network. Windows NT Workstation 4.0 users on Subnet1 are not experiencing this problem. However, they do report that response times for logon requests are extremely slow. None of the Windows 2000 Professional users on either subnet report these problems. You want to ensure that Windows NT Workstation 40 users on Subnet2 can be validated. You also want to improve logon request response time for users on Subnet1 What should you do?

A Configure the router to forward Netbios broadcast packets

B Configure the Windows NT Workstation 4.0 computers as DNS clients in the existing zone

C Configure the Windows NT Workstation 4.0 computers as WINS clients

D Configure the Windows 2000 Server domain controller computers as WINS clients

Answer: D

86.You are the administrator of your company’s network. The network consists of a single IP subnet that uses DHCP to automate client computer configuration. You install a WINS server on the network to reduce broadcast traffic for name resolution After several days, users report that the network response time is still unacceptably slow. You investigate and discover that the levels of broadcast traffic have not been reduced. When you view the WINS database, you also find that the only entry is for the WINS server itself. What should you do to resolve this problem?

A Configure the WINS server as a DHCP client computer

B Configure the DHCP server as a WINS client computer

C Configure a DHCP scope option to include the address of the WINS server

D Configure static mappings on the WINS server for each client computer

E Configure a reservation in the DHCP setting for the WINS server

Answer: C

87.You are the administrator of your company抯 network. The network consists of Windows 2000 Server computers Windows NT Workstation client computers and Windows for Workgroups 3.11 client computers distributed across three subnets. All client computers are configured as DHCP client computers to automate TCP/IP configuration. You install a WINS server on one subnet on your network. You also define a DHCP setting option to include the WINS server’s address. Users report that they can access resources on servers on their own subnet but they cannot access resources on other subnets. What should you do to resolve this problem?

A Use the Ipconfig/renew command to refresh the client computers configuration

B Use the Ipconfig/release command to refresh the client computers configuration

C Install a WINS proxy agent on the subnet that hosts the WINS server

D Install a WINS proxy agent on the subnets that do not host the WINS server

Answer: A

88.You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network. The network has four Windows 2000 based WINS servers named NY1, NY2, Bos1, and Bos2. The network has computers in two locations Boston and New York. The Bos1 and Bos2 WINS servers are at the Boston location. The NY1 and NY2 WINS servers are at the New York location. You want to configure the replication between the WINS servers to accomplish the following goals: The NY1 and NY2 WINS servers must replicate changes in the local database to each other immediately following each new registration or IP address change registration. The Bos1 and Bos2 WINS servers must replicate changes in the local database to each other every 30 minutes. The changes in the WINS database in either location should be replicated to the other location every three hours How should you configure the WINS servers to accomplish these goals? (Choose three)

A Configure the WINS servers to enable burst handling

Set the number of requests for burst handling to 1

B Configure the NY1 and NY2 WINS servers as push/pull partners of each other

Configure both WINS servers to use persistent connections for push replication partners

Set the number of changes before replication to 1

C Configure the Bos1 and Bos2 WINS servers as push/pull partners of each other

Specify a replication interval of 30 minutes

D Configure the Bos1 and Bos2 WINS servers as push/pull partners of each other

Configure both WINS servers to enable periodic database consistency checking every 30 minutes

E Configure the NY1 and the Bos1 WINS servers as push partners of each other

Configure both WINS servers to update statistics every three hours

F Configure the NY1 and the Bos1 WINS servers as push/pull partners of each other

Specify a replication interval of three hours

Answer: BCF

89.You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network. The network has three segments connected by a router. Each segment contains a Windows 2000 based WINS server and two other Windows 2000 Server computers. The network also has 300 Windows NT Workstation 40 WINS client computers distributed evenly over the three segments. Users in each network segment inform you that they cannot browse any network resources on the other network segments. They do not have problems browsing their own segment. How should you configure the network to enable users to browse for network resources on all three network segments?

A Configure all WINS client computers to be NetBIOS node type Mixed (m-node)

B Configure all WINS client computers to use all three WINS servers

C On each WINS server, configure the Lmhosts file to contain entries that include #PRE and #DOM for the other two WINS servers

D Configure the three WINS servers as replication partners of one another

Answer: D

 
 
 
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