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  • Question
  • How can you assign an application to one processor exclusively?


  • Options
  • A. Right click on application executable, select properties and select assign processor
  • B. Right click on application process in Task Manager, select Set Affinity, and select the appropriate processor
  • C. Open Task Manager, chose options from task bar, select processor and assign processes to appropriate processor
  • D. Open Task Manager, chose Performance, chose view all processors, assign processes to appropriate processor
  • E. None of above.

  • Correct Answer
  • Right click on application process in Task Manager, select Set Affinity, and select the appropriate processor 


  • Windows 2000 Server problems


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    • 1. You are installing Windows 2000 Server on a multiprocessor computer. The manufacturer has provided a customized HAL to use with the computer. The HAL is on the floppy disk. You want to install the customized HAL design for the computer. What should you do?

    • Options
    • A. During the text mode portion of the Windows 2000 setup install the customized HAL
    • B. After text mode portion of Windows 2000 setup is complete use the recovery console to copy the customized HAL to the system32 folder on the boot partition
    • C. After the text mode portion your windows 2000 setup is complete use the emergency repair process to replace the existing HAL with the customized HAL and then continue the windows 2000 setup
    • D. After the Windows 2000 setup is complete use the device manager to scan for Hardware changes when prompted install the customized HAL
    • E. None of above
    • Discuss
    • 2. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 Server computer that has FIVE hard disks. Four 100 GB hard disks on the server are configured as a single stripe volume. You want to reconfigure the fourth disk so that the volume is fault tolerant and has as much space possible available for storing data. You want to use only existing hardware. What should you do?

    • Options
    • A. Convert the disk to dynamic disk shut down and restart the server
    • B. Backup the data on the stripe volume and delete the stripe volume. Create a raid5 volume on the four disks, restore the data to the new raidS volume
    • C. Backup the data on the stripe volume and delete the stripe volume. Create to mirror volume, shut down and restart the server. Restore the data to new mirror volumes
    • D. Backup the data on the stripe volume and delete the stripe volume. Create a span volume for the first two disks, create a second span volume for the last two disk. Mount the root of the second span volume in the root of the first span volume. Restore the data to the first span volume
    • E. None of above
    • Discuss
    • 3. You are the administrator of a network that consists of a single Windows NT 4.0 domain. The network contains five Windows NT Server domain controllers and 1,000 Windows NT Workstation client computers. You want to install Windows 2000 Server on a new computer. You want the new computer to act as a domain controller in the existing domain. What should you do?

    • Options
    • A. On the new computer, install Windows NT Server 4.0 and designate the computer as a BDC in the existing domain. Promote the computer to the PDC of the domain. Upgrade the computer to Windows 2000 Server
    • B. On the new computer, install Windows NT Server 4.0 and designate the computer as a PDC in a new domain that has the same NetBIOS name as the existing Windows NT domain. Upgrade the computer to Windows 2000 Server. Use Active Directory Sites and Services to force synchronization of the domain controllers
    • C. Shut down the PDC of the existing Windows NT domain from the network. On the new computer, install Windows 2000 Server, and then run the Active Directory Installation wizard to install Active Directory, specifying the same NetBIOS name for the Windows2000 domain as the existing Windows NT domain
    • D. Shut down the PDC of the existing Windows NT domain from the network. On the new computer, install Windows 2000 Server, and then run the Active Directory Installation wizard to install Active Directory as a replica in the existing Windows NT domain. Promote the new computer to the PDC of the domain. Restart the Windows NT PDC on the network and demote it to a BDC
    • E. None of above
    • Discuss
    • 4. You are the administrator of Windows 2000 Server network. On each server you format a separate system partition and a separate boot partition as NTFS. Several months later you shut down one of the computers for maintenance. When you try to restart the computer you receive the following error message "NTLDR is missing, press any key to restart". You want to install a new NTLDR file on the computer but you do not want to loose any settings you made since the installation. What should you do?

    • Options
    • A. Start the computer by using Windows 2000 Server computer CD-ROM and choose tools to repair the installation. Select recovery console and copy the NTLDR file on the CD-ROM to the root of the system volume
    • B. Start the computer by using the Windows 2000 server CD- ROM, choose to reinstall. When the installation is complete copy the NTLDR to the root of the boot volume
    • C. Start the computer by using the Windows 2000 bootable floppy disk. From a command prompt run the sfc/scanboot command
    • D. Start the computer by using Windows 2000 bootable floppy disk. Run the file signature verification utility
    • E. None of above
    • Discuss
    • 5. A Windows 2000 Server computer named server2 runs numerous 32bit applications and two 16bit applications. Users start the 16bit applications by running APP1.EXE for one application and APP2.EXE for another application. The 16bit applications are configured to run in the separate memory space. You want to create a performance base like chart in the system monitor for all the applications on server2. You add all of 32bit applications and now you want to add two 16bit applications. What should you do?

    • Options
    • A. Add the APP1 and APP2 instances to the processor time counter for the process object
    • B. Add the NTVDM, APP1 and APP2 instances for the processor time counter for the process object
    • C. Add only the NTVDM instance for the percent processor time counter for the process object
    • D. Add the NTVDM 1 and NTVDM #2 instances for processor time counter for the process object
    • E. None of above
    • Discuss
    • 6. You are the administrator of the Windows 2000 Server network shown in the exhibit. Users in the Research group and the Executive group have permission to access the Internet through a Windows 2000 Server computer running Microsoft Proxy Server. These users must enter their proxy server user names and passwords to connect to the proxy server, to the Internet, and to your local intranet server. The users who do not access the Internet do not have user accounts on the proxy server and, therefore, cannot connect to the intranet server. You want all users to be able to connect to the intranet server without entering a separate user name and password. What should you do?

    • Options
    • A. Move the intranet server to the client segment of the network
    • B. Move the proxy server to the server segment of the network
    • C. Configure each client computer to bypass the proxy server for local addresses
    • D. Configure each client computer to use port 81 for the proxy server
    • E. None of above
    • Discuss
    • 7. You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 server computer. The server has a single hard disk with two partitions. An application that runs on your server creates a very large log file in the SystemrootYTemp folder. There is not enough free space on the system partition to accommodate the log file. The application does not provide a way to change the path to the log file. You want to run the application on your server. What should you do?

    • Options
    • A. On the second partition, create a shared folder named Temp
    • B. In the systemroot folder, create a shortcut named Temp that points to the second partition on the disk
    • C. Add a second hard disk. Create and format a partition from the free space on the second hard disk. Create a Temp folder on the new partition. Mount the system partition as the Temp folder on the new partition
    • D. Add a second hard disk. Delete the contents of the SystemrootYTemp folder. Create and format a partition from the free space on the second hard disk. Mount the partition as the SystemrootYTemp folder
    • E. None of above
    • Discuss
    • 8. You install a Windows 2000 Server computer on your network. You place several shared folders on a 12-GB primary partition formatted by FAT32. During nine months of continuous operation, the number of users who access the server and their access frequency remains constant. The average size of the files on the server remains approximately constant. After the server runs continuous for nine months, users report that the server does not retrieve files from the shared folders as fast as when you first installed the server. What should you do to resolve the problem?

    • Options
    • A. Convert the disk that contains the shared folders to a dynamic disk
    • B. Convert the partition that contains the shared folders to NTFS
    • C. Defragment the disk that contains the shared folders
    • D. Move the paging file to the partition that contains the shared folders
    • E. None of above
    • Discuss
    • 9. You install a new multiple-process database application named Application on your Windows 2000 Server computer. Two days later, users begin to report that the new application has suddenly stopped responding to queries. You verify that the server is operation and decide that you need to restart the application. What should you do before you restart the application?

    • Options
    • A. End the task named Application
    • B. End the Application.exe process
    • C. End the Application.exe process tree
    • D. End both the Explorer.exe process and the Application.exe process
    • E. None of above
    • Discuss
    • 10. You install Terminal Services on a Windows 2000 domain controller. You install Terminal Services Client on users' client computers. Users report that when they try to connect to the Terminal server, they receive the following error message: "The local policy of this system does not allow you to logon interactively." When you attempt to log on to the Terminal server as an administrator from a user's computer, you log on successfully. You want users to be able to log on to the Terminal server. What should you do?

    • Options
    • A. Grant the users the right to log on as a service
    • B. Grant the users the right to log on locally
    • C. Grant the users the right to log on over the network
    • D. Copy the users' prpfiles to the Terminal server
    • E. Copy the users' home folders to the Terminal server
    • Discuss


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