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You have a DHCP server named Server1 that runs Windows Server 2012 R2.

HOTSPOT
You have a DHCP server named Server1 that runs Windows Server 2012 R2.
On Server1, you run the commands as shown in the exhibit. (Click the Exhibit button.)

To answer, complete each statement according to the information presented in the exhibit. Each
correct selection is worth one point.

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Answer:

9 Comments on “You have a DHCP server named Server1 that runs Windows Server 2012 R2.

    1. Mr. B says:

      Can you explain why you think this is the right answer, rather than just putting it down here? Here is what I think is the right answer:

      192.168.15.250 – The computer with the MAC address is trying to connect to the network 192.168.15:- which has the DNS server attached 192.168.15.250, which comes from the command Set-DhcpServerv4Optionvalue -DnsServer 192.168.15.250 -Router 192.168.15.1 -ScopeId 192.168.15.0. The reservation on the MAC address is for the 192.168.10 network.

      210 – A little bit of simple math here to find out the number of available addresses. The server scope is adjusted so the range is from 11 to 230. Including the border numbers, that is 220 available addresses. The exclusion command then excludes the addresses 21 to 30, which is a total of 10 addresses (including the borders).

      Thus, 220 – 10 = 210 available addresses.




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  1. Serge says:

    the question is tricky
    192.168.15.250 because PC with mac: AABBCCDDEEFF connects to 192.168.15.0/24 subnet but reservation is on the different subnet 192.168.10.0/24

    Scope and exclusion ranges include borders, so:
    11 to 230 = 220 addresses
    21 to 30 = 10 addresses
    220 – 10 = 210




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  2. Douggie says:

    Disagree gents.
    DNS server is set to 172.16.1.250 for the reserved IP of 192.168.10.15

    https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/%5Clibrary/jj590669(v=wps.630).aspx

    EXAMPLE 3
    This example sets the option values for DNS server, WINS server, DNS domain, router, and WPAD for reserved IP address 10.10.10.5.

    Windows PowerShell
    PS C:\> Set-DhcpServerv4OptionValue -ComputerName dhcpserver.contoso.com -ReservedIP 10.10.10.5 -DnsServer 192.168.1.2 -WinsServer 192.168.1.3 -DnsDomain contoso.com -Router 192.168.1.1 -Wpad http://proxy.contoso.com/wpad.dat




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    1. harry518 says:

      Douggie is right, I’ve run the powershell commands on a test server.

      Add-dhcpserverv4reservation blablabla ( will create the reservation address 192.168.10.15 in scope1)
      Set-DhcpServerv4OptionValue -DNSserver 172.16.1.250 -ReservedId 192.168.10.15 (Will create a DHCP option for reservation 192.168.10.15) and thus pc with MAC:AABBCCDDEEFF will get the 172.16.1.250 as a DNS server and IP 192.168.10.15.




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  3. billkom says:

    I think the answer is right.
    There is two scopes configured on the server. The reservation is set on the first scope, 192.168.10 and the DNS Server 172.16.1.250 is set for the reserved IP 192.168.10.15, which is a reservation in scope id 192.168.10

    The question is what would IP address the client that has MAC AABBCCDDEEFF will get when this client is connected to a network segment that requests an IP address from Scope “192.168.15”?
    The answer is that it will get an IP address from “192.168.15” scope and the DHCP options, including the DNS server configured for “192.168.15” scope. The DNS server configured for “192.168.15” scope is 192.168.15.250
    So the answer is correct, DNS server 192.168.15.250




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  4. Valensuela says:

    Wouldn’t the number of leases available actually be 254 instead of 210?

    The subnet listed is the /24 subnet.

    11111111.11111111.11111111.00000000 = 255.255.255.0

    2^8=256-2=254




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