You are the administrator of CompanyX network. You configure a Windows 2000 Server computer as the DNS server for your network. You create both standard primary forward lookup and reverse lookup zones. You discover that when you use the nslookup utility, you cannot resolve host names from IP addresses on your network. You also discover that when you run the Tracert.exe utility, you receive the following error message. "Unable to resolve target system name." What should
Answer: C
You are the administrator of CompanyX network. Your Windows 2000 Server computer named Srv2 cannot communicate with your UNIX server named Srv1. Srv2 can communicate with other computers on your network. You try to ping Srv1, but you receive the following error message, "Unknown host Srv1". You create an A (host) record that has the correct name and IP address. However, when you try to ping Srv1 again, you receive the same error message. What should you do to resolve
Answer: D.
You are the administrator of CompanyX 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.
Answer: C.
You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network that consists of three subnets. For load-balancing purposes, each Web server on the network is configured to maintain exactly the same content as all the other web servers. You want to configure your DNS server to allow users to type a host name in their browser to connect to Web server that is on the same subnet. The host name that all users type will be identical regardless of the subnet they are on. How should you configure
Answer: A.
You are the administrator of Windows 2000 network. Your network has one primary internal DNS server and one primary external DNS server. Your network has three secondary DNS servers that transfer zone information from the primary external DNS server. The secondary DNS servers are installed on two Windows 2000 Server computers and one Windows NT 4.0 computer. The primary external DNS server is used to host records for CompanyX Web and mail servers. It has only a limited number of
Answer: B, D.
You are the network administrator for the branch office of a large company. Your network is connected to the company network by means of a Windows 2000 Routing and Remote Access two-way demand dial connection over ISDN. To reduce costs, the ISDN links should only be used once each day to transfer sales information to or from the main office. This transfer should occur during nonbusiness hours. You discover that several times a day an ISDN link is initiated between the networks.
Answer: A, C.
You are the network administrator for a branch office of a large company. Your network is connected to the company network by means of a Windows 2000 Routing and Remote Access two-way demand-dial connection over ISDN. In addition to e-mail and application traffic, sensitive company data is transferred across this connection. You want to accomplish the following goals: • All data transmitted over the connection will be secured. • Rouge routers will be prevented from
Answer: A, C, D.
You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 network. Some of the members of CompanyX graphics department use Macintosh computers and are not using Internet Explorer as their browser. These users inform you that they cannot request valid user certificate from your Enterprise Certificate Authority (CA). You want to make it possible for these users to request certificates by using Web-based enrollment. What should you do? A. In the Internet Information Services (IIS) console, access
Answer: A.
You are the administrator of CompanyX network. Your company has branch offices in New York and Paris. Because each branch office will support its own Routing and Remote Access server, you implement a Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service (RADIUS) server to centralize administration. You remove the default remote access policy. You need to implement one company policy that requires all dial-up communications to use 40-bit encryption. You want to configure your network to require
Answer: B, C.
You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 domain. The domain has a Windows 2000 member server computer named Ras5. Routing and Remote Access is enabled for remote access on Ras5. The domain also has a Windows NT 4.0 member server computer named Ras4. Ras4 is running Remote Access Service (RAS). The domain is in mixed mode. Users in the domain use Windows 2000 Professional computers to dial in to the network through Ras4 or Ras5. However, Ras4 is not able to validate remote access
Answer: C