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NAV 2009 Installation & Configuration: mb7-838 Exam
Exam Number/Code: mb7-838
Exam Name:NAV 2009 Installation & Configuration
” NAV 2009 Installation & Configuration”, also known as mb7-838 exam, is a Microsoft certification.
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Question: 1.
You are the administrator of a Windows NT domain. You recently used Syskey.exe on a BDC
named serverA. ServerA is backed up once each week, and a new emergency Repair Disk is
created at the same time. You shut down ServerA and cannot restart it. You cannot locate the
floppy disk that contains the Syskey encryption key. What should you do so that you can start
ServerA?
A. Start serverA by choosing the safe mode option, and use Windows NT backup to restore
ServerA’s registry from the most recent backup tape that was created before Syskey.exe was
used.
B. Start serverA by choosing the safe mode option, and use Windows NT backup to restore
ServerA’s registry from the first recent backup tape that was created after Syskey.exe was
used.
C. Run the emergency repair process by using the most recent ERD that was created before
Syskey.exe was used
D. Run the emergency repair process by using the ERD that was created after Syskey.exe was
used.
Answer: C
Explanation:
In order to back off the process, you need to restore the SAM as well as the key. Running the
emergency repair process with the older ERD will properly regress the syskey.
Incorrect Answers:
A, B. Windows NT does not have a “safe mode” startup. This is available in Windows 98 and
Windows 2000.
That aside, restoring the registry is not enough, the SAM (the accounts database) would need to
be restored also. The emergency repair process should accomplish this.
D. Assuming that a new ERD was created after the syskey operation, this would put you right
back where you were, a system that can’t start and no encryption key to start it.
Question: 2.
You are the lead administrator of a Windows NT server network. Occasionally, an assistant
administrator temporarily adds a user account to the Domain Admins group and then forgets to
remove that user account when the need for the extra permissions has passed.
You want to ensure that unwanted additional to your Domain Admins group are periodically
removed, and that any existing user accounts that are accidentally removed are added back to
the group. You want to accomplish these tasks by using the least amount of administrative effort.
What should you do?
A. Create a batch file that deletes the Domain Admins group and then re-creates it and adds the
appropriate user accounts as members. Configure the Task Scheduler service on the PDC to
run this batch file every Monday and Thursday.
B. Create a batch file that deletes the Domain Admins group and then re-creates it and adds the
appropriate user accounts as members. Configure the Task Scheduler service on your client
computer to run this batch file every Monday and Thursday.
C. Create a security template that lists the Domain Admins group as a restricted group that has
the appropriate user accounts as members. Configure the Task Scheduler service on the PDC
to run the command-line version of Security Configuration Manager so that it applies the
template every Monday and Thursday.
D. Create a security template that lists the Domain Admins group as a restricted group that has
the appropriate user accounts as members. Every Monday and Thursday, on your client
computer, run the GUI version of Security Configuration Manager to apply the template to the
PDC.
Answer: A
Explanation:
As much as I don’t like this, this is the best choice. I don’t like it because if the procedure fails,
you better have a backup way into the system, because the Domain Admins could end up empty
if the procedure fails after the delete. Anyway, this solution will work. Running the task on
different days, and not every day does the periodic cleanup, is less often, and there is less of an
exposure for failure. Since Monday and Thursday are the same options in ALL the choices, we
don’t need to address that. Finally, we want procedure to occur on the PDC, so that it will run
even of the network is down.
Incorrect Answers:
B. Running the procedure on the client is a security risk, anyone who can compromise the client
can also compromise the entire network. Workstations are not always kept in secure locations.
Also, even if the workstation was secured, it might not always be up, as some people physically
turn off the machine after-hours.
Finally, if the network is down, or the workstation is unplugged, the procedure will not run, where
if it runs on the PDC, it will always have access to the SAM database. Example: Supposed my
user account was added to Domain Admin, and I knew this procedure ran, and when. I could go
to the client, disconnect the network cable, and the update does not occur. I have now subverted
the security.
C, D. Restricted groups were introduced in Windows 2000. It does not exist in Windows NT. If it
did, it would have to be added with Service Pack 4 or later. Note that authenticated users were
added in SP3. Since this is a NT server network, which implies NT 4.0, then we can’t use this
option.
Question: 3.
Two weeks ago, you became the lead administrator of an existing Windows NT domain. Success
and failure auditing of Logon and Logoff events is enabled for the domain. Success and failure
auditing of file and object access events is also enabled.
Every Friday afternoon, an assistant administrator backs up each of the event logs and archives
them to CD-ROM. Your event logs are each configured to have a maximum size of 32,768KB,
and they are configured so that events in the log are not overwritten.
On Thursday at 5:00 P.M., during a week when almost everyone in the company has been
working longer than usual, your PDC fails and displays the following stop error:
STOP: C0000244 (Audit Failed)
An Attempt to generate a security audit failed.
You restart the PDC, but after approximately five minutes, it stops again and displays the same
message.
You need to restore the PDC to full functionality.
What three courses of action should you take?
(Each correct answer presents part of the solution. Choose Three)
A. On BDC, start User manager for Domains. In the Audit Policy dialog box, click the Do Not
Audit option button.
B. Restart the PDC, and log on to it as Administrator
C. Use Event Viewer to archive the PDC’s system, log
D. Use Event Viewer to archive the PDC’s security log
E. Use Event Viewer to configure Event Log Wrapping to overwrite events older than seven days
for the PDC’s system log
F. Use Event Viewer to configure Event Log Wrapping to overwrite events older than seven days
for the PDC’s security log
G. Use Event Viewer to configure the PDC’s system log to have a maximum log size of 48,064
KB
H. Use Event Viewer to configure the PDC’s security log to have a maximum log size of 48,064
KB
Answer: B, D, H
Explanation:
If the CrashOnAuditFail registry key is set to 1 and the Security Event log is full on a computer
running Windows NT, the following blue screen error message may be displayed:
STOP: C0000244 {Audit Failed} An attempt to generate a security audit failed.
This occurs when the security log is full, since the PDC failed, you must log onto the PDC. You
must work with the security log, and not the system log, since it is the security log at issue here.
So you would want to archive the FULL security log, and since it is not large enough, make it
larger.
Incorrect Answers:
A. The recovery must be done on the failing system.
C. Must work with Security Log, not System Log.
E. Must work with Security Log, not System Log.
F. Wrapping the security log has a potential of losing security audit records. This is not good
security practice.
G. Must work with Security Log, not System Log.
Question: 4.
You are the Administrator of one of Examsheets’s Windows NT domains. You are modifying a
security template that was created by the administrator of one of the company’s other domain.
The template contains password policy settings that represent the company’s minimum standards
for password policy.
When you finish modifying the template, it will be applied to all domain controllers in every
domain in the company.
You have the template open in security configuration manager on your PDC. You are modifying a
portion of the Security option section of the template. You analyze your domain’s current settings
against the template’s settings. The results of the analysis are shown in the exhibit.
Question 5
You are using Windows installer to deploy an application to 750 Windows 2000 Professional
computers on your network. The network includes an organizational unit (OU) named sales. A
Group Policy object (GPO) is created for the Sales OU. The software deployment of the
application is unsuccessful. During the deployment, some users in the Sales OU report the
installation is aborting with random errors midway through the installation process. The remaining
users in the Sales OU report the software is installing, but is giving them general protection fault
errors. What should you do?
A. Repackage and re-deploy the application’s .MSI file to the Sales OU.
B. Repackage and re-deploy the application’s .MST file to the Sales OU.
C. Re-deploy the application by using the Group Policy object (GPO) for the Sales OU.
D. Restart Windows Installer on all computers in the Sales OU. Then re-deploy the application’s
.zap file to the sales OU.
Ans: A
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