What are two possible ways to achieve this goal?
You are the network administrator for your company. The network consists of a single Active Directory domain. All servers run Windows Server 2003. All client computers run either Windows XP Professional or Windows 2000 Professional. All client computer accounts are located in an organizational unit (OU) named Workstation. A written company policy states that the Windows 2000 Professional computers must not use offline folders. You create a Group Policy object (GPO) to enforce this requirement. The settings in the GPO exist for both Windows 2000 Professional computers and Windows XP Professional computers. You need to configure the GPO to apply only to Windows 2000 Professional computers. What are two possible ways to achieve this goal? (Each correct answer presents a complete solution. Choose two.)
What should you do next?
You have a single Active Directory directory service domain. All servers run Windows Server 2003. You need to specify the list of applications that users are permitted to run. You create a new Group Policy object (GPO) and link it to the domain. What should you do next?
Which two actions should you perform?
You have two Active Directory directory service forests named contoso.com and fabrikam.com. All users log on to the contoso.com domain. All servers run Windows Server 2003 and are members of the fabrikam.com domain. You create a one-way forest trust in which fabrikam.com is trusting contoso.com. Forest-wide authentication is enabled. You need to provide only selected users with access to a server in the fabrikam.com domain. Which two actions should you perform? (Each correct answer presents part of the solution. Choose two.)
What should you do?
You are the network administrator for your company. Your network consists of a single Active Directory domain. The functional level of the domain is Windows Server 2003. You add eight servers for a new application. You create an organizational unit (OU) named Application to hold the servers and other resources for the application. Users and groups in the domain will need varied permissions on the application servers. The members of a global group named Server Access Team need to be able to grant access to the servers. The Server Access Team group does not need to be able to perform any other tasks on the servers. You need to allow the Server Access Team group to grant permissions for the application servers without granting the Server Access Team group unnecessary permissions. What should you do?
What are two possible ways to achieve this goal?
You are the network administrator for your company. The network consists of a single Active Directory domain with three sites named Site1, Site2, and Site3. The sites and site links are configured to use Site2 to connect Site1 and Site3. Each site contains three Windows Server 2003 domain controllers. A domain controller in each site is configured as a preferred bridgehead server. All user and group accounts are created in Site1. Several new users start work in Site2. When they attempt to log on to the network, the logon fails. You confirm that the user accounts are created and are visible in Site1 and Site2. You discover that the preferred IP bridgehead server in Site2 failed. You repair the server and confirm that replication is successful to Site2. You need to ensure that the failure of a single domain controller in any site will not interfere with Active Directory replication between sites. What are two possible ways to achieve this goal? (Each correct answer presents a complete solution. Choose two.)
Using the Active Directory Schema snap-in, what should you do?
You have a single Active Directory directory service domain. You have an application that adds Active Directory Schema attributes during installation. The attributes replicate as part of global catalog replication. Your user account is a member of the Domain Admins, Schema Admins, and Enterprise Admins global groups. You test the application and decide not to deploy it to production. You need to ensure that the attributes that are added by the application are no longer available in Active Directory. Using the Active Directory Schema snap-in, what should you do?
What should you do?
You have a single Active Directory directory service domain. You back up your domain controllers on a nightly basis. An organizational unit (OU) is accidently deleted.
You need to restore the objects that were located in the OU. What should you do?
What should you do?
You have a single Active Directory directory service domain. You back up your domain controllers on a nightly basis. You perform Group Policy backups on a nightly basis. A Group Policy object (GPO) is accidentally deleted. You need to restore the GPO. What should you do?
What should you do?
You have a single Active Directory directory service domain. You use Group Policy to assign applications. A computer named Desktop1 must be moved to a different organizational unit (OU). You need to ascertain the effect that the move will have on the applications that are assigned to the computer account. What should you do?
What should you do?
You have a single Active Directory directory service domain. All users in the IT department are placed into an organizational unit (OU) named IT Users. A Group Policy object (GPO) is linked to the IT Users OU. The GPO assigns a software installation package to install the Windows Server 2003 Administration Tools Pack. You select the Install this application at logon option in the software installation package. A user has been removed from the IT Users OU, but she still has the Windows Server Administration Tools Pack on her computer. You need to ensure that the Windows Server 2003 Administration Tools Pack is removed from a users computer when the user is moved from the IT Users OU. What should you do?