You need to ensure that the print jobs in the Printer1 queue are printed
Your network contains an Active Directory domain. The domain contains two print servers named Server1 and Server2 that run Windows Server 2008 R2.
Server1 has a printer named Printer1. Server2 has a printer named Printer2. Both printers use the
same driver. The print device for Printer1 fails.
You need to ensure that the print jobs in the Printer1 queue are printed. What should you do?
You need to ensure that users can locate all shared printers on Server1 by using Active Directory
Your network contains an Active Directory domain. The domain contains a print server named Server1. Server1 runs Windows Server 2008 R2.
You need to ensure that users can locate all shared printers on Server1 by using Active Directory.
What should you do from Server1?
You need to ensure that only members of a group named Marketing can print color documents on the new print dev
Your network contains an Active Directory domain.
You have a print server named Server1 that runs Windows Server 2008 R2. You deploy a new print device and create a shared printer. You need to ensure that only members of a group named Marketing can print color documents on the new print device. All other users must only be able to print black and white documents on the new print device.
What should you do?
You need to ensure that if Printer1 causes an exception, users can still print to Printer2 and Printer3
Your network contains a print server named Server1. Server1 has three shared printers named Printer1, Printer2, and Printer3. Each shared printer uses a different driver. You need to ensure that if Printer1 causes an exception, users can still print to Printer2 and Printer3.
What should you do?
What should you create from the File Server Resource Manager console?
Your network contains a file server named Server1 that runs Windows Server 2008 R2. You have a folder named Folder1.
You need to ensure that files in Folder1 that are older than 365 days are automatically moved to an archive folder.
What should you create from the File Server Resource Manager console?
You need to prevent users from storing audio and video files on volume E
Your network contains a file server named Server1 that runs Windows Server 2008 R2. Server1 has a volume named E.
From the File Server Resource Manager console, you create a new quota for volume E. The quota is derived from the 100 MB limit quota template.
You need to prevent users from storing audio and video files on volume E.
What should you do?
You need to ensure that a user named User1 can store files that are larger than 200 MB on volume
Your network contains a file server named Server1 that runs Windows Server 2008 R2. On Server1, you create a disk quota for volume E that limits storage to 200 MB for all users. You need to ensure that a user named User1 can store files that are larger than 200 MB on volume
What should you do?
You need to ensure that all file classification rules apply to scanned documents
Your network contains a server named Server1 that runs Windows Server 2008 R2. Server1 has the File Services role installed.
You configure a file classification rule.
You discover that scanned documents stored as JPG files are not being classified. You need to ensure that all file classification rules apply to scanned documents.
What should you do?
You need to allow users in the sales department to upload video files to C:\Data\Sales
Your network contains a file server that runs Windows Server 2008 R2. The server has File Server Resource Manager (FSRM) installed.
A file screen is created for a folder named Data. Data is located on the C drive. The file screen is configured to block files contained in the Audio and Video file group. You need to allow users in the sales department to upload video files to C:\Data\Sales.
What should you do?
You need to prevent the Exchange Server 2010 transaction log files from being purged
Your network contains a server named Server1 that runs Windows Server 2008 R2. Server1 has Microsoft Exchange Server 2010 deployed.
You schedule a backup of the server.
You discover that the Exchange Server 2010 transaction log files are purged during the backup. You need to prevent the Exchange Server 2010 transaction log files from being purged.
What should you do?