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Which cmdlet should you run?

Your company, Fabrikam Inc., has an Exchange Server 2013 organization. The organization that contains three
servers named Server1, Server2, and Server3. Server1 and Server2 are members of a database availability
group (DAG) named DAG1.
DAG1 contains two mailbox databases. All databases are active on Server1 and replicate to Server2.
You start an unplanned maintenance on Server1 and shut down Server1. You discover that the databases do
not mount on Server2. You restart Server1 and the databases mount automatically on Server1.
You need to identify what prevents the databases from switching over successfully to Server2.
Which cmdlet should you run?

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A.
Test-ReplicationHealth

B.
Test-OutlookConnectivity

C.
Test-ServiceHealth

D.
Get-AvailabilityReportOutage

Explanation:
The cmdlet is designed for the proactive monitoring of continuous replication and the continuous replication
pipeline, the availability of Active Manager, and the health and status of the underlying cluster service, quorum,
and network components. The Test-ReplicationHealth cmdlet can be run locally or remotely against any
Mailbox server in a DAG.
NOT B
Test-OutlookConnectivity
Use the Test-OutlookConnectivity cmdlet to test end-to-end Microsoft Outlook client connectivity in the
Microsoft Exchange Server 2013 organization. This includes testing for Outlook Anywhere (RPC/HTTP)
connections.
EXAMPLE 1
This example runs a protocol test from the Mailbox server.
Test-OutlookConnectivity -ProbeIdentity “OutlookSelfTestProbe”
NOT C
Use the Test-ServiceHealth cmdlet to test whether all the Microsoft Windows services that Exchange requires
on a server have started.
The Test-ServiceHealth cmdlet returns an error for any service required by a configured role when the service
is set to start automatically and isn’t currently running.
EXAMPLE 1
This example uses the Test-ServiceHealth command without parameters to test the services on the local
server.
Test-ServiceHealth
NOT D
Use the Get-AvailabilityReportOutage cmdlet to return the daily downtime (if any) for each service entity and its
overridden value (if set) to the overall reported availability for the day.
For information about the parameter sets in the Syntax section below, see Syntax.
This example returns all outages that occurred the previous day. This cmdlet always returns outages for oneday.
Get-AvailabilityReportOutage
Test-ReplicationHealth: Exchange 2013 Help


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