PrepAway - Latest Free Exam Questions & Answers

You need to create a new starter GPO based on the settings in GPO1

Your network contains an Active Directory domain named contoso.com.
You have a starter Group Policy object (GPO) named GPO1 that contains more than 100 settings.
You need to create a new starter GPO based on the settings in GPO1. You must achieve this goal by using the
minimum amount of administrative effort.
What should you do?

PrepAway - Latest Free Exam Questions & Answers

A.
Run the New-GPStarterGPOcmdlet and the Copy-GPO cmdlet.

B.
Create a new starter GPO and manually configure the policy settings of the starter GPO.

C.
Right-click GPO1, and then click Back Up. Create a new starter GPO. Right-click the new GPO, and then
click Restore from Backup.

D.
Right-click GPO1, and then click Copy. Right-click Starter GPOs, and then click Paste.

34 Comments on “You need to create a new starter GPO based on the settings in GPO1

  1. TRA says:

    I tried it to be sure; D is least effort, so that’s obviously the right one – but saying it’s the only one that works is not true. C works, but it’s not least effort.




    0



    0
    1. Catalina says:

      D is not working , the same A and C, I tried it
      Only B is working, but it implies a lot of work . But all of the others not work at all
      Copy-GPO function only between GPOs, not Starters




      0



      0
  2. vishwas says:

    Answer is A.

    Question says ” create a new starter GPO based on setting of starter GPO > GPO1″

    Answer D is incorrect because there is no new starter GPO created.

    As per question we have to create a new starter GPO.Copy cmdlet copies the specified Starter GPO settings from a source to destination (New starter GPO). So answer A. I am putting all my money on answer A.




    0



    0
  3. Ronald says:

    I also believe it’s D. I tested this in my environment.
    It tells us there is already a starter GPO which we want to copy.
    Just go to “Starters GPOs” in group policy management, right click on the starter GPO and click on copy. Then on the “Starters GPOs” folder, right click and choose paste.

    Answer A doesn’t seem correct. The first command creates a starters gpo but the copy command also creates a gpo. If you first create a starter gpo then the copy command doesn’t make sense.
    Look here: https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ee461050.aspx
    The Copy-GPO cmdlet creates a (destination) GPO and copies the settings from the source GPO to the new GPO.




    0



    0
    1. Ronald says:

      To add, see the same TechNet article and somewhere at the bottom it says:

      If a GPO with the same display name as a source GPO already exists in the destination domain, an error occurs when this command attempts to copy the source GPO




      0



      0
  4. liam says:

    GPO’S and Starter GPOs can be copied

    A starter Gpo can be used to create a new GPO -hence what starter GPO’S are for

    an GPO can no be copied to a new starter GPO.

    you must copy the starter GPO and configure it manually.




    0



    0
  5. osama says:

    hi
    in my pdf answer its written like this
    Explanatonn
    Although GPOs and Starter GPOs can both be copied, and a Starter GPO can be used to create a new GPO (as that is
    their purpose), an existng GPO cannot be copied to a new Starter GPO (unfortunately).

    so answer is a




    0



    0
  6. R-Nuq says:

    I believe the correct ans is “C’. Understand the question from here “You need to create a new starter GPO based on the settings in GPO1”. you need to “create” and not copy/paste.




    0



    0

Leave a Reply