Yournetwork contains an Active Directory domain named contoso.com. The domain contains a
member server named Server1. Server1 has the IP Address Management (IPAM) Server feature
installed.
A technician performs maintenance on Server1.
After the maintenance is complete, you discover that you cannot connect to the IPAM server on
Server1.
You open the Services console as shown in the exhibit. (Click the Exhibit button.)
You need to ensure that you can connect to the IPAM server.
Which service should you start?

A.
Windows Process Activation Service
B.
Windows Event Collector
C.
Windows Internal Database
D.
Windows Store Service (WSService)
Explanation:
Windows Internal Database
Windows Internal Database is a relational data store that can be used only by Windows roles and
features.
IPAM does not support external databases. Only a Windows Internal Database is supported.
IPAM stores 3 years of forensics data (IP address leases, host MAC addresses, user login/logoff
information) for 100,000 users in a Windows Internal Database. There is no database purge policy
provided, and the administrator must purge data manually as needed.
Incorrect:
Not A. IPAM works even if the Windows Process Activation Service is not running.
Not B. IPAM does not require the Windows Event Collector Service. It need to be running on the
managed DC/DNS/DHCP computers.
Not D. IPAM does not require the Windows Store Service. It provides infrastructure support for
Windows Store.This service is started on demand and if disabled applications bought using
Windows Store will not behave correctly. IPAM Deployment Planning
Answer is correct.
But the Windows Internal DB service must have been set to DISABLED to not start when IPAM console is started.
As soon as the IPAM console tries to connect to the server, and the Windows Internal DB is not started, it will start the service.
Just al little more info
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The answer is correct, but your explanation is a bit off. Setting any service to DISABLED will keep it disabled. Nothing will start it. That’s the whole point of it being disabled. If the service was set to MANUAL however, then other services/apps may start it on manual request/connection.
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maybe Franc’s explanation was not as off as you got it: I think this was just a hint that in case the service is 1.) not running and 2.) configured to MANUAL, the it will get startet as soon as you start dependend processes (IPAM console here).
So the conclusion is according to the question: the service must have been disabled, and before just starting it, it has also be configured to at least MANUAL.
I think he just wanted to point out that the question has some WTF potential and therefore somebody who’s just learning by memorizing would not be able to accomplish mission later in real life environment…
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Yup, I think this is exactly what he wrote.
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