You need to ensure that SRV1 reflects the change immediately
Your company has a main office and a branch office. The main office has a domain controller named DC1 that hosts a DNS primary zone. The branch office has a DNS server named SRV1 that hosts a DNS secondary zone. All client computers are configured to use their local server for DNS resolution. You change the IP address of an existing server named SRV2 in the main office. You need to ensure that SRV1 reflects the change immediately.
What should you do?
Which record should you create?
Your company has a domain controller named Server1 that runs Windows Server 2008 R2.
Server1 has the DNS Server server role installed.
You need to configure the DNS server to resolve IP addresses to host names. Which record should you create?
Which command should you run?
Your network has Network Access Protection (NAP) policies deployed.
You need to identify the health agent compliance status of a client computer.
Which command should you run?
You need to migrate \\contoso
Your network contains a domain-based Distributed File System (DFS) namespace named \\contoso.com\dfs. \\contoso.com\\dfs is configured to use Windows 2000 Server mode. The domain contains two servers named Server1 and Server2 that run Windows Server 2008 R2. Server1 is configured as a namespace server for \\contoso.com\dfs. You need to migrate \\contoso.com\dfs to Windows Server 2008 mode. You install the Distributed File System role service on Server2. What should you do next?
You need to ensure that the contoso
Your network contains two servers named Server1 and Server2 that run Windows Server 2008 R2. Server1 and Server2 are configured as DNS servers. On Server1, you create a primary DNS zone named contoso.com. You configure Server2 to host a secondary copy of contoso.com. On Server2, you open DNS Manager as shown in the exhibit. (Refer to the Exhibit.)
You need to ensure that the contoso.com zone is available on Server2. What should you do?
You need to ensure that users in the branch offices can access their local application server even if the WAN
Your company has a main office and two branch offices. Domain controllers in the main office host an Active Directory-integrated zone.
The DNS servers in the branch offices host a secondary zone for the domain and use the main office DNS servers as the DNS Master servers for the zone.
Each branch office has an application server. Users access the application server by using its fully qualified domain name.
You need to ensure that users in the branch offices can access their local application server even if the WAN links are down for three days.
What should you do?
You need to ensure that the DNS server in the branch office is able to query any DNS server in the main office
Your company has multiple DNS servers in the main office. You plan to install DNS on a member server in a branch office. You need to ensure that the DNS server in the branch office is able to query any DNS server in the main office, and you need to limit the number of DNS records that are transferred to the DNS server in the branch office.
What should you do?
Which tool should you use?
Your network contains a server that runs a Server Core installation of Windows Server 2008 R2. You need to configure outbound firewall rules on the server. Which tool should you use?
You need to ensure name resolution for users in contoso
Your company has a single domain named contoso.com. The contoso.com DNS zone is Active Directoryintegrated.
Your partner company has a single domain named partner.com. The partner.com DNS zone is Active Directoryintegrated.
The IP addresses of the DNS servers in the partner domain will change. You need to ensure name resolution for users in contoso.com to resources in partner.com.
What should you do?
You need to ensure that Server3 is able to immediately resolve the updated DNS record
Your company has two servers that run Windows Server 2008 R2 named Server2 and Server3. Both servers have the DNS Server server role installed. Server3 is configured to forward all DNS requests to Server2. You update a DNS record on Server2.
You need to ensure that Server3 is able to immediately resolve the updated DNS record. What should you do?