READ Free Dumps For Microsoft- 70-410
Question ID 9115 | You have a server named Server2 that runs Windows Server 2012 R2. Server2 has the Hyper-V server role installed.
The disks on Server2 are configured as shown in the exhibit. (Click the Exhibit button.)
You create a virtual machine on Server2 named VM1.
You need to ensure that you can configure a pass-through disk for VM1.
What should you do?
Exhibit:
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Option A | Convert Disk 1 to a basic disk.
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Option B | Take Disk 1 offline.
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Option C | Create a partition on Disk 1.
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Option D | Convert Disk 1 to a MBR disk.
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Correct Answer | B |
Explanation Explanation/Reference: Pass-through Disk Configuration Hyper-V allows virtual machines to access storage mapped directly to the Hyper-V server without requiring the volume be configured. The storage can either be a physical disk internal to the Hyper-V server or it can be a Storage Area Network (SAN) Logical Unit (LUN) mapped to the Hyper-V server. To ensure the Guest has exclusive access to the storage, it must be placed in an Offline state from the Hyper-V server perspective
Question ID 9116 |
You have a server named Server1 that runs Windows Server 2012 R2. Server1 has the Hyper-V server role installed. Server1 has 8 GB of RAM.
Server1 hosts five virtual machines that run Windows Server 2012 R2.
The settings of a virtual machine named Server3 are configured as shown in the exhibit. (Click the Exhibit button.)
You need to ensure that when Server1 restarts, Server3 automatically resumes without intervention. The solution must prevent data loss. Which settings should you modify?
Exhibit:
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Option A | BIOS
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Option B | Automatic Start Action
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Option C | Automatic Stop Action
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Option D | Integration Services
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Correct Answer | C |
Explanation Explanation/Reference: The Automatic Stop Action setting should be modified because it will allow you to configure: "Save the virtual machine state" option instructs Hyper-V Virtual Machine Management Service to save the virtual machine state on the local disk when the Hyper-V Server shuts down. OR "Turn Off the virtual machine" is used by the Hyper-V Management Service (VMMS.exe) to gracefully turn off the virtual machine. OR "Shut down the guest operating system" is successful only if the "Hyper-V Shutdown" guest service is running in the virtual machine. The guest service is required to be running in the virtual machine as the Hyper-V VMMS.EXE process will trigger Windows Exit message which is received by the service. Once the message is received by the guest service, it takes the necessary actions to shut down the virtual machine. Reference: http://www.altaro.com/hyper-v/hyper-v-automatic-start-and-stop-action/