CIS 192 70-412 Disaster Recovery Testout Questions

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Implement shadow copies on the relevant data.

You are a technical consultant for many businesses in your community. One of your clients, a small law firm, has a single Active Directory domain. They have two Windows 2012 R2 servers. Both servers are configured as domain controllers while also serving as file and printer servers. This client is calling you on a regular basis because users are deleting or damaging their files. You must visit the client's site and restore the files from backup. Your client has asked you to create an alternate solution. What should you do? Create a cluster server. Train the users how to use the backup program. Implement shadow copies on the relevant data. Enable incremental backups to a media other than tape.

Delete the existing shadow copies. Change the shadow copy location.

You are in charge of managing Srv12, a server that runs the Windows Server 2012 R2 operating system. Srv12 has a single volume that is used for storing user data. You have previously enabled shadow copies on this volume and have created two schedules for taking shadow copies. One schedule takes a copy Monday through Friday at 2 AM. The second schedule takes a copy on Sunday at 10 PM. The hard disk is filling up with shadow copies and user data. You add a new hard disk and want to store shadow copies for the existing volume on this disk. When you try to change the shadow copy location, the location is disabled. You need to change the location. What should you do? Delete the existing shadow copies. Change the shadow copy location. Disable shadow copies on the volume. Enable shadow copies and configure the shadow copy location. Stop the Volume Shadow Copy service. Change the shadow copy location. Restart the service. Modify the existing scheduled tasks to move each shadow copy after it is created.

Configure shadow copies to be saved on a different volume. Create a new volume. Move the two shared folders to that volume and enable shadow copies on that volume.

You are the administrator for a Windows Server 2012 R2 server called Srv6. All user data is stored on the D:\ drive in four shared folders. You want to enable shadow copies for two of the shared folders. You want to maximize performance and minimize administrative effort, as well as the amount of disk space used for shadow copies. What should you do? (Select two. Each choice is a required part of the solution.) Enable shadow copies on the D:\ drive. Configure shadow copies to be saved on the same volume. Enable shadow copies on the two shared folders. Configure shadow copies to be saved on a different volume. Create a new volume. Move the two shared folders to that volume and enable shadow copies on that volume.

Run the vssadmin create shadow command.

You are the network administrator for Corpnet.com. You have a Windows Server 2012 R2 server named File1 that contains user data on volume E:. You need to create a volume shadow copy of the data in volume E:. What should you do? Run the Write-VolumeCache cmdlet. Run the Optimize-Volume cmdlet. Run the vssadmin create shadow command. Run the vssadmin add shadowstorage command.

Modify the backup location for the schedule backup.

You are the network administrator for Corpnet.com. You install the Windows Server Backup Feature on a Windows Server 2012 R2 file server named File1 and schedule a nightly backup. When you attempt to perform a restore, you discover that only the last backup is available. You need to ensure that multiple backups of the server are available for restores. What should you do? Modify the frequency of the scheduled backup. Modify the backup location for the schedule backup. Use the wbadmin command to run a critical volumes backup. Modify the Volume Shadow Copy (VSS) settings of the scheduled backup.

Upgrade FS2 to Windows Server 2012 R2. Then, install the Windows Server Backup feature on FS1 and configure FS1 to back up both servers.

You are the network administrator for eastsim.com. The network consists of a single domain. There are two file servers named FS1 and FS2 that are located at the main office. FS1 is running Windows Server 2012 R2. FS1 has an external RAID array that contains 500 GB of data and 200 GB of free space. FS1 also has an external hard drive with 2 terabytes of free space. FS2 is running Windows Server 2008. FS2 has an external RAID array that also contains 500GB of data with 300 GB of free space. You need to design a disaster recovery plan that will allow you to completely restore either file server in the event of a failure. What should you do? Install the Windows Server Backup feature on FS1 and configure FS1 to back up both servers. Upgrade FS2 to Windows Server 2012 R2. Then, install the Windows Server Backup feature on FS1 and configure FS1 to back up both servers. Install the Wbadmin feature on each of the servers. Install the Windows Server Backup feature on each of the servers.

Use the Windows Server Backup feature to perform a Custom backup. On the Select Items for Backup page, select the C:\SalesData folder.

You are the network administrator for eastsim.com. The network consists of a single domain. All of the servers run Windows Server 2012 R2. All of the clients run Windows 7 or Windows 8. The main office contains a file server named FS1, that is running out of space. Another file server, named FS2, is available. It has 500 GB of free space. You need to move the C:\SalesData folder from FS1 to FS2. Before you move the folder, you need to perform a backup of the C:\SalesData folder in the minimum amount of time. What should you do? Use the Windows Server Backup feature to perform a Custom backup. On the Select Items for Backup page, select System state. Use the Windows Server Backup feature to perform a Custom backup. On the Select Items for Backup page, select the C:\SalesData folder. Use the Windows Server Backup feature to perform a Custom backup. On the Select Items for Backup page, select Bare metal recovery. Use the Windows Server Backup feature to perform a Full server backup.

Use the vssadmin command.

You are the network administrator for westsim.com. The network consists of a single domain. All of the servers run Windows Server 2012 R2. All of the clients run Windows 7 or Windows 8. The main office contains one file server named FS1. A user on FS1 requests that you restore a copy of a 1 GB file. You use the Previous Versions tab to launch the restore of the file. However, the file seems to be taking a considerable amount of time. You need to check the status of the file restoration. What should you do? Use the diskshadow command. Use the vssadmin command. Use the Open Files node in Computer Management. Use the Sessions node in Computer Management.

Start the computer from the Windows Server 2012 R2 installation disk.

You are the network administrator for westsim.com. The network consists of a single domain. All of the servers run Windows Server 2012 R2. All of the clients run Windows 8. A server named RODC1 is a read-only domain controller located in a branch office. RODC1 uses Bitlocker to encrypt all drives for extra security. You have been notified that RODC1 failed. After obtaining the necessary hardware to repair the server, you need to perform a bare metal restore of the server. What should you do? Start the computer using the Last Known Good configuration. From the BIOS, disable the Trusted Platform Module (TPM) chip. From the BIOS, enable the Trusted Platform Module (TPM) chip. Start the computer from the Windows Server 2012 R2 installation disk.

Enable VSS on the volume that holds user data.

You are the server manager for your company. You have just installed Windows Server 2012 R2 on a new server. You have configured Windows Server Backup to take regular backups once a day and save those backups to an external disk. You find that users working on a new project are constantly overwriting files and asking you to restore older versions of files that exist on backups from as far back as a week ago. You would like to implement a solution so that users can restore files without an administrator's help. What should you do? Configure a Scheduled Task to run wbadmin and save backups to rewriteable DVDs in an automatic disc changer. Add the Indexing Service role service to the server. Keep regular backup disks connected to the server and online. Teach users how to recover files from the backups. Enable VSS on the volume that holds user data.

Use Windows Server Backup to create scheduled backups to a removable hard disk.

You are the server manager for your company. You have just installed Windows Server 2012 R2 on a new server. You need to design a backup and recovery strategy for the server that meets the following requirements: • You will use Windows tools for the backups. • Backups are to be taken to an offsite location for storage after they are performed. • Backups should only save data changed since the last backup. • You need to be able to recover individual files and folders. What should you do? Use Windows Server Backup to create scheduled backups to a removable hard disk. Configure the Volume Shadow Copy Service (VSS) to save snapshots to an external drive. Use Ntbackup to take incremental backups to tape. Configure a Scheduled Task to run Wbadmin and save backups to DVD.

Close the file. Restore the file from the previous version.

You have recently created a copy of a new work schedule for your administrative team. The schedule is saved on a network share on a Windows Server 2012 R2 server. Shadow copies have been enabled on the volume. Yesterday, you made some modifications to the schedule. However, when you check the schedule today, you find that your changes are gone. You need to get back the changes you made yesterday. You do not need to keep the current version of the file. You use the Previous Versions tab to check yesterday's shadow copy. You open the file from the previous version and find that your changes exist in the version from yesterday. What should you do? Close the file. Restore the file from the previous version. Close the file. Copy the file from the previous version. With the file open, save the file to a different location. With the file open, save the file.

Create a Scheduled Task that runs wbadmin start backup. Save backups to a shared folder.

You manage a Windows Server 2012 R2 Server Core installation that stores user data files. You will use Windows Server Backup to configure a backup schedule. You want to perform a complete system backup every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. You want to be able to restore the entire system or individual files from the backup. What should you do? (Select two. Each choice is a required part of the solution.) Save backups to DVDs. Create a Scheduled Task that runs wbadmin start backup. In Windows Server Backup, run the Backup Schedule wizard. Save backups to a shared folder.

Recover the backup to the original location. Do not perform roll-forward recovery. Recover the application and its data from disk.

You manage a Windows Server 2012 R2 server named Srv12. Srv12 hosts an application that stores data in a custom database. You configure Windows Server Backup to back up the volume for the application and its data. The application has a VSS writer, and it is running when the backup completes. The hard disk holding the application and data has crashed. You check your backup media and find you have a DVD from today. You also have a hard disk with a backup taken last night, but that disk is stored in an offsite location. You want to restore the application and its data as quickly as possible, but leave the database in an unrecovered and offline state. What should you do? (Select two. Each choice is a required part of the solution.) Recover the backup to the original location. Perform roll-forward recovery. Recover the backup to the original location. Do not perform roll-forward recovery. Recover the application and its data from DVD. Recover the backup to a different location. Do not perform roll-forward recovery. Recover the application and its data from disk. Recover the backup to a different location. Perform roll-forward recovery.

From the Previous Versions tab for the file, select the previous version and choose Copy....

You manage a Windows Server 2012 R2 server named Srv5. To help reduce restore from backup operations, you enable shadow copies on the server's D:\ drive. A user asks you for a previous version of the D:\Reports\May13.doc file. He thinks the file was changed a week ago. He wants the file to be reverted back to that version, but would like to keep the current copy as well. What should you do? From the Previous Versions tab for the file, select the previous version and choose Copy.... From the Previous Versions tab for the file, select the previous version and choose Restore.... From the Previous Versions tab for the volume, select the previous version and choose Revert.... From the Previous Versions tab for the folder, select the previous version and choose Copy.... From the Previous Versions tab for the folder, select the previous version and choose Restore....

Change the shadow copy schedule to take snapshots less frequently.

You manage a Windows Server 2012 R2 server named Srv5. To help reduce restore from backup operations, you enable shadow copies on the server's D:\ drive. You configure the schedule to take snapshots four times every day of the week. The disk has a capacity of 60 GB, with the default amount being allocated to shadow copies. On Wednesday, the company CEO calls to say he needs a previous version of a file from 20 days ago. You check the Previous Versions for the file and the folder, but you can't find a version of that file that is that old. The oldest previous version you can find is from 15 days ago. You check the disk space and find that shadow copies are using 5.5 GB, and that there is 10 GB of free space left on the drive. You restore the file from a backup, but you would like to keep this from happening in the future. You would like to be able to restore up to 30 days of previous files. What should you do? Move the shadow copy storage area to a new volume. Add more free disk space to the server. Change the shadow copy schedule to take snapshots less frequently. Increase the maximum disk size used by shadow copies.

Delete the shadow copy scheduled task for the {23317831-e012-11dc-957e-806} volume.

You manage a Windows Server 2012 R2 server named Srv5. To help reduce restore from backup operations, you enable shadow copies on the server's D:\ drive. You configure the schedule to take snapshots four times every day, Sunday through Saturday. During a recent upgrade, you install a 100 GB disk into the server. You move all user data to the new disks, then delete the existing volume holding the D:\ drive. You enable shadow copies on the new volume, with the default amount being allocated to shadow copies. You recreate a schedule to match the original schedule. After several days, you notice the following error repeated in the event log: Event Type: Error Event Source: VSS Event ID: 7001 Computer: Srv5 Description: VssAdmin: Unable to create a shadow copy: Either the specified volume was not found or it is not a local volume. 'C:\WINNT\system32\vssadmin.exe Create Shadow /AutoRetry=5 /For=\\?\Volume{23317831-e012-11dc-957e-806}\'. You check the shadow copies on the new volume and see several days' worth of copies. You check the disk space and find that shadow copies are using 1.5 GB. There are 30 GB of free space left on the drive. You need to eliminate the error. What should you do? Increase the maximum disk size used by shadow copies. Change the storage location for shadow copies to a different drive. Delete the shadow copy scheduled task for the {23317831-e012-11dc-957e-806} volume. Disable shadow copies on the new volume, then re-enable shadow copies with a new schedule.

Increase the maximum disk size used by shadow copies.

You manage a Windows Server 2012 R2 server named Srv5. To help reduce restore from backup operations, you enable shadow copies on the server's D:\ drive. You configure the schedule to take snapshots four times every day, Sunday through Saturday. The disk has a capacity of 60 GB, with the default amount being allocated to shadow copies. On Wednesday, the company CEO calls to say he needs a previous version of a file from 20 days ago. You check the Previous Versions for the file and the folder, but you can't find a version of that file that is that old. The oldest previous version you can find is from 10 days ago. You check the disk space and find that shadow copies are using 6 GB, and that there are 10 GB of free space left on the drive. You restore the file from a backup, but you would like to keep this from happening in the future. You would like to be able to restore up to 15 days of previous files. What should you do? Increase the maximum disk size used by shadow copies. Add more free disk space to the server. Change the shadow copy schedule to take snapshots less frequently. Change the shadow copy schedule to take snapshots more frequently.

Save the backup to an external hard disk. Create a backup schedule in Windows Server Backup.

You manage a Windows Server 2012 R2 server that is used to hold user data files. The system volume is drive C:, while all user data is on drive E:. You will use Windows Server Backup to configure a backup schedule. You want to back up the E: volume only, twice a day. You want to be able to restore individual files and folders. If possible, you want to save backups on optical media so you can place the backup disc in a media catalog server for easy retrieval. What should you do? (Select two. Each choice is a required part of the solution.) Save the backup to an external hard disk. Save the backup to DVD. Create a backup schedule in Windows Server Backup. Create a Scheduled Task that runs wbadmin start systemstatebackup.

Configure the script to save the backups in subfolders in the shared folder.

You manage a Windows Server 2012 R2 server that is used to hold user data files. You configure a script that runs as a Scheduled Task that runs wbadmin start backup and saves backups to a shared folder. The first day, the script runs fine and the backup is made as required. The second day, you arrive at work and find that the backup has failed. Not only that, but the backup from the previous day no longer exists. You want to make sure that you can save multiple backups to the shared folder, if possible. If a backup fails, it should not affect existing backups. What should you do? Change the Scheduled Task to run wbadmin enable backup. Attach multiple disks to the server and save the backups on those disks. Remove the Scheduled Task. Configure the backup using the Backup Schedule wizard. Configure the script to save the backups in subfolders in the shared folder.

Run Windows Server Backup and start the Backup Once wizard. Save the backup to a shared folder on the network. Run wbadmin. Save the backup to a local disk.

You manage a Windows Server 2012 R2 server that is used to hold user data files. You will use Windows Server Backup to configure a backup schedule. You are about to make some configuration changes to the server. You want to create a backup of the system state only--right now, before making the changes. What should you do? (Select two. Each choice is a complete solution.) Run Windows Server Backup and start the Backup Schedule wizard. Save the backup to a local disk. Run Windows Server Backup and start the Backup Once wizard. Save the backup to a shared folder on the network. Run Windows PowerShell cmdlets for Windows Server Backup. Save the backup to a DVD. Run wbadmin. Save the backup to a local disk.

Run Windows Server Backup and start the Backup Once wizard. Save the backup to a shared drive on the network. Run wbadmin. Save the backup to a local disk. Run Windows Server Backup and start the Backup Once wizard. Save the backup to a local disk.

You manage a Windows Server 2012 R2 server that is used to hold user data files. You will use Windows Server Backup to configure a backup schedule. You are about to make some configuration changes to the server. You want to create a one-time backup of the system state before making the changes. What should you do? (Select three. Each choice is a complete solution.) Run Windows Server Backup and start the Backup Once wizard. Save the backup to a shared drive on the network. Run Windows Server Backup and start the Backup Schedule wizard. Save the backup to a local disk. Run wbadmin. Save the backup to a local disk. Run Windows Server Backup and start the Backup Once wizard. Save the backup to a local disk. Run wbadmin. Save the backup to a DVD.

Add a new external hard disk to the system.

You manage a Windows Server 2012 R2 server that is used to store user data files. You install a tape drive in the server. Following the installation, you check Device Manager and the device appears to be working correctly. You run Windows Server Backup and start the Backup Schedule wizard. After configuring the schedule, you get a message stating that there is no available backup destination. What should you do? Add a new external hard disk to the system. Update the drivers for the tape drive. Run wbadmin start backup to configure the backup schedule. Make sure a tape is in the drive and is formatted. Run wbadmin enable backup to configure the backup schedule.

Create a Scheduled Task that runs wbadmin start backup. Save backups to a shared folder. Use Windows PowerShell cmdlets for Windows Server Backup to schedule the backups. Save the backups to an external hard drive attached to the server. In Windows Server Backup, run the Backup Schedule wizard. Save backups to a shared folder.

You manage a Windows Server 2012 R2 server that is used to store user data files. You will use Windows Server Backup to configure a backup schedule. You want to perform a complete system backup daily. You want to be able to restore the entire system or individual files from the backup. What should you do? (Select three. Each choice is a complete solution.) Use Windows PowerShell cmdlets for Windows Server Backup to schedule the backups. Save the backups to DVDs. Create a Scheduled Task that runs wbadmin start backup. Save backups to a shared folder. In Windows Server Backup, run the Backup Schedule wizard. Save backups to DVDs. Use Windows PowerShell cmdlets for Windows Server Backup to schedule the backups. Save the backups to an external hard drive attached to the server. In Windows Server Backup, run the Backup Schedule wizard. Save backups to a shared folder.

Go get the hard disk with last night's backup. Run the Recovery Wizard using the backup on the disk.

You manage a Windows Server 2012 R2 server that stores user data files. You have previously configured several scheduled backups in Windows Server Backup. A user comes to you wanting a file restored from a recent backup. You check your backup media and find that you have a DVD from today. You also have a hard disk with a backup taken last night, but that disk is stored in an offsite location. You need to restore the file as soon as possible with the least amount of disruption to other users. What should you do? Run the Recovery Wizard using the backup on the DVD. Run wbadmin start sysrecovery using the backup on the DVD. Go get the hard disk with last night's backup. Run wbadmin start sysrecovery using the backup on the disk. Go get the hard disk with last night's backup. Run the Recovery Wizard using the backup on the disk.


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