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Which criteria should you specify when you create the D…

You are a network administrator of an Active Directory domain named contoso.com. You have a server named Server1 that runs Windows Server 2012. Server1
has the DHCP Server server role and the Network Policy Server role service installed. You enable Network Access Protection (NAP) on all of the DHCP scopes on

Server1. You need to create a DHCP policy that will apply to all of the NAP non-compliant DHCP clients. Which criteria should you specify when you create the
DHCP policy?

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A.
The relay agent information

B.
The user class

C.
The vendor class

D.
The client identifier

3 Comments on “Which criteria should you specify when you create the D…

  1. sultan says:

    https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dn425039

    • Open DHCP Console
    • Go to Server > IPv4 > Policies
    • Right click and click New Policy
    • Input Name (ex. NAP Non-Compliant Computers) & Description
    • Click Next
    • Click Add
    ○ Select Criteria: User Class
    ○ Select Operator: Not Equals
    ○ Select Values: Default Network Access Protection Class
    ○ Click Add
    • Click Ok
    • In the Configure Settings for the policy screen input the available settings you’d like the clients to have
    • Click Next
    • Click Finish




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  2. gunzzz says:

    I’ll let this extract from self paced for 411 becouse looks related to the question:

    Note: Steps for DHCP
    The steps for this procedure are those for creating a network policy for a noncompliant VPN connection. The steps for a noncompliant DHCP connection are slightly different, and you’ll be asked to specify the name of the DHCP scope to use. The scope name becomes part of the policy to match the MS-Service Class condition. Exams aren’t about exact steps, but what you’re configuring, and the basic process is the same




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  3. TTTT says:

    B

    MAC Address: The media access control (MAC) address or link-layer address of the client.

    Vendor Class: Vendor managed DHCP option assignments.

    User Class: Non-standard DHCP option assignments.

    Client Identifier: The client identifier (ClientID) is typically a MAC address. In the case of PXE clients, it can be the GUID of the network interface card (NIC).

    Relay Agent Information, including sub-options: Agent Circuit ID, Agent Remote ID, and Subscriber ID: Information inserted into DHCP client requests by a DHCP relay using option 82.




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