Which cmdlet should you run?
You have an Exchange Server 2010 organization. You need to identify the following
information for a user’s mailbox: The size of items in the Inbox folder The number of items in
the Deleted Items folder.
You must achieve this goal by using the minimum amount of administrative effort.
Which cmdlet should you run?
You need to identify whether an administrator has made a configuration change in the Exchange organization
You have an Exchange Server 2010 organization. You need to identify whether an
administrator has made a configuration change in the Exchange organization. What should
you run?
You need to view a list of mailboxes on all servers that are larger than 1 GB
You have an Exchange Server 2010 organization. You need to view a list of mailboxes on all
servers that are larger than 1 GB. What should you do?
You need to determine why a remote SMTP server rejects e-mail sent from your organization
You have an Exchange Server 2010 organization.
You need to determine why a remote SMTP server rejects e-mail sent from your
organization.
What should you do?
You need to identify which SMTP error codes occur when the delivery to Host1 fails
You have an Exchange Server 2010 Edge Transport server. You discover that e-mail
delivery to an external SMTP host named Host1 fails. You need to identify which SMTP error
codes occur when the delivery to Host1 fails. What should you do?
You need to modify the storage location of the message tracking logs
You have an Exchange Server 2010 Service Pack 1 (SP1) server that has message tracking
enabled.
You need to modify the storage location of the message tracking logs.
What should you do?
You need to reseed DB2 to MBX2
You have a database availability group (DAG) that contains two servers named MBX1 and
MBX2.
You discover that a mailbox database named DB2 is in a FailedAndSuspended state on
MBX2.
You need to reseed DB2 to MBX2. You must achieve this goal by using the minimum
amount of administrative effort.
What should you do?
You need to ensure that the Exchange servers can replicate mailbox databases
Your network contains two Exchange Server 2010 Mailbox servers. You create a database
availability group (DAG).
You need to ensure that the Exchange servers can replicate mailbox databases.
What should you do?
You need to change the TCP port that Server1 and Server2 use to send transaction log files
You have an Exchange Server 2010 organization that contains a database availability group
(DAG) named DAG1. DAG1 contains two Mailbox servers named Server1 and Server2.
You need to change the TCP port that Server1 and Server2 use to send transaction log files.
What should you do?
You need to ensure that all users can connect to their mailboxes if a single Mailbox server becomes unavailabl
Your Exchange Server 2010 organization contains the servers shown in the following table.
Server1 and Server2 are members of a database availability group (DAG).
You shut down Server1. Some users report that they cannot access their mailboxes.
You need to ensure that all users can connect to their mailboxes if a single Mailbox server
becomes unavailable.
What should you do?