|
|
Authorized user can see question and answers. Please log in or sign up. 
|
#101. You are the administrator for your company network. The network consists of 8 windows 2000 server computers, 200 windows Professional client computers and 10 UNIX servers. Windows 2000 is being used as your DNS server. Your DNS zone is configured as an active directory integrated zone and is configured to allow dynamic updates. Users report that they can successfully access the windows 2000 computers by host name but they cannot access the UNIX servers by host names.
How can they correct the problem?
Show comments for this question (0)
Add comments
Link to this question
|
|
#102. You are the administrator of your company's network. The network consists of one Windows 2000 domain. All servers and client computers are running Windows 2000 To facilitate name resolution and client access to resources on the servers, you have configured your DNS standard primary zone to include the addresses of all of your servers. You later add three new member servers to your network Users report that they can find these servers in the directory but cannot access these servers You want to resolve this problem.
What should you do?
Show comments for this question (0)
Add comments
Link to this question
|
|
#103. Your company's portable computers are frequently utilized by users at locations that are not on the network. Two DHCP servers provide IP configuration to your Windows 2000 Professional clients. You want to configure different lease times for the desktop computers and portable computers. Desktop clients should use the default lease time. Portable computes should use a lease time of four hours.
What should you do? (choose three)
Show comments for this question (0)
Add comments
Link to this question
|
|
#104. You configure a Win2000 Server as the DNS server for your network. You create both standard primary forward lookup and reverse lookup zones. When you use the NSLOOKUP utility, you cannot resolve host names from IP addresses on your network. When you run TRACERT.EXE you receive the message: "Unable to resolve target system name."
What should you do?
Show comments for this question (0)
Add comments
Link to this question
|
|
#105. You are the administrator for your company Windows 2000 network. The network has 5 Windows 2000 servers and 50 Windows 2000 Professional clients. Two servers are configured to be silent RIP hosts. You find out that the RIP hosts are not receiving routes.
What should you do?
Show comments for this question (0)
Add comments
Link to this question
|
|
#106. You are the administrator for your company's Windows 2000 Server network. The network contains 7 Windows 2000 Server computers and 60 Windows 2000 Professional client computers. Two server computers are configured to be Silent Routing Information Protocol (RIP) hosts. While running tests on the network after implementing the Silent RIP hosts, you discover a problem. You verify the version of RIP that the Silent RIP hosts support.
What problem did you encounter?
Show comments for this question (0)
Add comments
Link to this question
|
|
#107. You are the network administrator of a Windows 2000 network. The network consists of 400 Windows 2000 Professional computers. It has recently come to your attention that the users on your network have been using the same passwords since their accounts were created. To maintain security on the network you need to correct the problem. You create a Group Policy object (GPO) and filter it to the users. You want to configure the GPO to require users to create a different password periodically.
Which two should you enable?
Show comments for this question (0)
Add comments
Link to this question
|
|
#108. You use a computer running Win2000 server and the DHCP Server service to create a DHCP scope with a lease length of 15 days and a subnet mask of 21 bits. You now want to change the configuration for the scope to have an unlimited lease and a subnet mask of 28 bits.
How would you do this?
Show comments for this question (0)
Add comments
Link to this question
|
|
#109. Your network consists of two locations containing a Win2000 Server and 45 Win2000 Professional computers. The two servers are Win2000-based routers. Although the two routers are not connected directly to each other, they are connected by a third router. This third router is administered by a different company. Users in both locations want to provide multicast based datacasting of information to the other site. You add the Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) to both servers. However, the third router does not support multicast forwarding or routing.
How should you configure the network to allow IP multicast traffic to pass between the two locations? (choose three)
Show comments for this question (0)
Add comments
Link to this question
|
|
#110. You are the administrator for your company's Windows 2000 domain. On this domain, you have a Windows 2000 Server computer acting as your company's Internet interface. This morning when you came to work, you noticed that you had an unusually long wait time to access resources on your network. You run several tests but cannot seem to find any problems although the access times are incredibly long. When the users come in for work, they immediately start complaining about network performance. You then decide to start checking packets on the network. After investigating the problem, you notice that a denial of service attack has flooded your Internet server with "Destination Unreachable" packets. You want to prevent this from happening again with the least amount of administrative overhead possible. You do not want to prevent legitimate packets from being forwarded.
What should you do?
Show comments for this question (0)
Add comments
Link to this question
|
|
|
|
gen. 0.053
|
Server date 02:49 08-01-2009
|
Developed by Zip © 2006
|
|
 |
|
|