HOTSPOT
Your network contains an Active Directory domain named contoso.com. The domain contains four servers
named Server1, Server2, Server3, and Server4 that run Windows Server 2016.
Server1 and Server2 are nodes in a Hyper-V cluster named Cluster1. You have a highly available virtual
machine named VM1. Server1 is the owner node of VM1. Server3 and Server4 are nodes of a scale-out file
server named Cluster2.
The storage on Server1 is configured as shown in the following table.
VM1 is stored in C:\\ClusterStorage\\Volume1.
You need to move the virtual disk of VM1 to a different location.
What should you do? To answer, select the appropriate options in the answer area.
Hot Area:
Explanation:
Box 1: Failover Cluster Manager
You can use Failover Cluster Manager to do a Storage Migration to a shared folder.Box 2: \\\\Cluster2\\Share1
For a highly-available VM, the storage must be accessible by all nodes in the cluster. Therefore, in this scenario, we have to use the file share.
You c
References:
https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/clustering/2012/04/26/windows-server-2012-storage-migration-for-clustermanaged-virtual-machines/
Wrong answer is provided.
Failover Cluster Manager would be used to move the VM files.
E:\ would be the destination.
A mapped file share is not a viable path (Rules out \\cluster2\share1).
The path must be available to all nodes in the cluster (iSCSI drive E:)
0
1
My previous comment was wrong.
The provided answer is correct.
The file share could in fact be used as the destination, it just would not be added as a CSV to the cluster.
6
0
I do not agree.
Provided answer is correct.
I do not understand what you call the share \\cluster2\share1 as mapped? It is network share and we assume that accessible for both servers. There you have manual how SMB shares should be used as VM files repositories: https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/jj614620(v=sc.12).aspx
In contrary volume E: is locally mapped LUN, present on Server1, but on Server2… no word is given.
4
0