Yes, I've finally resorted to looking at the Test King material for this exam. On this one, I just don't think that their answer is correct.
You are the network administrator for TestKing.com. TestKing has offices in Chicago, New York and Toronto. Each office employs 500 people.
The network consists of a single Active Directory forest with one domain in each office. Each domain contains two domain controllers named Testking1 and Testking2. All domain controllers run Windows Server 2003. Each office is configured as an Active Directory site.
The Windows Server 2003 computer named Testking1.testking.com holds all operations master roles for its domain, and it holds both forest-level operations master roles. The Windows Server 2003 computer named Testking1.sales.testking.com and Testking1.prod.testking.com hold all operations master roles for their respective domains. WAN connectivity between the offices is unreliable.
You need to plan the placement of global catalog servers for the network. You need to ensure that each user can log on in the event of the failure of a single domain controller and WAN connection. You need to ensure that the consistency of universal group membership information remains intact.
Which two actions should you take? (Each correct answer presents part of the solution. Choose two)
A. Configure both domain controllers in testking.com as global catalog servers.
B. Configure only Testking1 in each domain as a global catalog server.
C. Configure only Testking2 in each domain as a global catalog server.
D. Enable universal group membership caching for each site.
E. Enable universal group membership caching for the Chicago office.
F. Enable universal group membership caching for the Toronto office and the New York office.
Their answer: A, F.
Here's where I'm confused. I thought that the Microsoft best practice was to never place a global catalog server on the same DC that holds the infrastructure master role. Answer A would do that.
My answer would be C, F.
Could anyone shed some light as to why A, F would be (or would not be) the correct answer?
Wishdiak
A+, Network+, Security+, MCSA: Security 2003
You are the network administrator for TestKing.com. TestKing has offices in Chicago, New York and Toronto. Each office employs 500 people.
The network consists of a single Active Directory forest with one domain in each office. Each domain contains two domain controllers named Testking1 and Testking2. All domain controllers run Windows Server 2003. Each office is configured as an Active Directory site.
The Windows Server 2003 computer named Testking1.testking.com holds all operations master roles for its domain, and it holds both forest-level operations master roles. The Windows Server 2003 computer named Testking1.sales.testking.com and Testking1.prod.testking.com hold all operations master roles for their respective domains. WAN connectivity between the offices is unreliable.
You need to plan the placement of global catalog servers for the network. You need to ensure that each user can log on in the event of the failure of a single domain controller and WAN connection. You need to ensure that the consistency of universal group membership information remains intact.
Which two actions should you take? (Each correct answer presents part of the solution. Choose two)
A. Configure both domain controllers in testking.com as global catalog servers.
B. Configure only Testking1 in each domain as a global catalog server.
C. Configure only Testking2 in each domain as a global catalog server.
D. Enable universal group membership caching for each site.
E. Enable universal group membership caching for the Chicago office.
F. Enable universal group membership caching for the Toronto office and the New York office.
Their answer: A, F.
Here's where I'm confused. I thought that the Microsoft best practice was to never place a global catalog server on the same DC that holds the infrastructure master role. Answer A would do that.
My answer would be C, F.
Could anyone shed some light as to why A, F would be (or would not be) the correct answer?
Wishdiak
A+, Network+, Security+, MCSA: Security 2003