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Q11.  (Topic 6) 

Your company has an Exchange Server 2013 organization named adatum.com. 

You purchase an Office 365 subscription and configure a hybrid deployment. 

All recipients have an email address that contains a SMTP suffix of adatum.com. 

You discover that all of the email messages sent to the Internet from users who have Office 365 mailboxes are routed through the on-premises Exchange servers. 

You need to ensure that all of the email messages are sent directly to the Internet. 

What should you do? 

A. Modify the Send connector. 

B. Run the Hybrid Configuration wizard. 

C. Create a new Sharing policy. 

D. Modify an organization relationship. 

Answer:

Explanation: 

Creating and configuring a hybrid deployment with the Hybrid Configuration wizard is now a single process in Microsoft Exchange Server 2013. 

Note: A hybrid deployment offers organizations the ability to extend the feature-rich experience and administrative control they have with their existing on-premises Microsoft Exchange organization to the cloud. A hybrid deployment provides the seamless look and feel of a single Exchange organization between an on-premises Exchange Server 2013 organization and Exchange Online in Microsoft Office 365. In addition, a hybrid deployment can serve as an intermediate step to moving completely to an Exchange Online organization. 


Q12. HOTSPOT - (Topic 1) 

You need to configure transport rules to meet the technical requirements for the PII data and the financial data. 

How should you configure the rules? 

To answer, disable the appropriate rule or rules in the answer area. 

Answer: 


Q13. DRAG DROP - (Topic 6) 

You have an Exchange Server 2013 organization that has Information Rights Management 

 (IRM) configured. 

Users report that they cannot apply IRM protection to email messages from Outlook Web 

App. 

You verify that the users can protect the messages by using IRM from Microsoft Outlook. 

You need to recommend a solution to ensure that the users can protect email messages by 

using IRM from Outlook Web App. 

Which four actions should you recommend? 

To answer, move the four appropriate actions from the list of actions to the answer area 

and arrange them in the correct order. 

Answer: 


Q14. HOTSPOT - (Topic 6) 

You have an Exchange Server 2013 organization. 

You run Get-OutlookAnywhere -Server EX1 | fl and you receive the following output. 

Use the drop-down menus to select the answer choice that completes each statement. 

Answer:

 


Q15.  (Topic 5) 

You are evaluating the deployment of two additional Client Access servers and a hardware load balancer in the London office. 

You need to recommend changes to the Client Access namespace design to meet the site resiliency requirements. 

Which three actions should you recommend? (Each correct answer presents part of the solution. Choose three.) 

A. In the London office, set mail.proseware.com as the external host name for Outlook Anywhere. In the New York office, set mail.proseware.com as the external host name for Outlook Anywhere. 

B. In the London office, set lonmail.proseware.com as the internal host name for Outlook Anywhere. In the New York office, set nycmail.proseware.com as the internal host name for Outlook Anywhere. 

C. Use DNS round robin for the external host name for Outlook Anywhere. 

D. Use DNS round robin for the internal host name for Outlook Anywhere. 

E. In the London office, set nycmail.proseware.com as the external host name for Outlook Anywhere. In the New York office, set lonmail.proseware.com as the external host name for Outlook Anywhere. 

F. In the London office, set mail.proseware.com as the internal host name for Outlook Anywhere. In the New York office, set mail.proseware.com as the internal host name for Outlook Anywhere. 

Answer: A,B,C 

Explanation: 

A: Use mail.proseware.com as the external host name for Outlook Anywhere at both locations. 

B: Use internal names (lonmail.proseware.com and nycmail.proseware.com) as the internal 

host name for Outlook Anywhere in London and New York respectively. 

C: To meet the resiliency requirement use the external host name (mail.proseware.com) for 

DNS round robin for Outlook anywhere. 

* From scenario: 

/ Users connect to mail.proseware.com for Microsoft Outlook and Outlook Web App 

services. Mail.proseware.com resolves to an IP address on a hardware load balancer. 

/ All Outlook Anywhere users are enabled for Cached Exchange Mode. 

/ Proseware has two main offices located in New York and London. 

/ Site Resiliency Requirements 

-All mailboxes must be available if a single site becomes unavailable. The solution must not require administrator intervention. 

-User traffic on the WAN links must be minimized. 

* Split DNS for Exchange Server 2013 Split DNS allows your internal clients to receive a different answer to their DNS lookups than an external client would receive. In effect you have your Exchange namespace hosted on your internal DNS server, with records configured to point to internal IP addresses. 


Q16.  (Topic 6) 

You have an Exchange Server 2013 organization that contains one office in Los Angeles and one office in New York. 

All servers have the Mailbox server role and the Client Access server role installed and are members of a data availability group (DAG) named DAG1. The servers and databases are shown in the exhibit. (Click the Exhibit button.) 

You need to ensure that if the active copy of NYDB01 fails, a server in the same site will attempt to activate a copy of the database before a server in another site does. The solution must not influence the activation of other database copies. 

Which command should you run? 

A. suspend-mailboxdatabasecopy -identity nydb01\ex3 -activationonly 

B. set-mailboxserver -identity ex3 -autodatabasemountdial bestavailability 

C. suspend-mailboxdatabasecopy -identity nydb01\ex4 -activationonly 

D. set-mailboxserver -identity ex4 -autodatabasemountdial bestavailability. 

Answer:


Q17.  (Topic 6) 

You have an Exchange Server 2010 organization named adatum.com. 

All public folders are stored on a server named EX5. 

You deploy a new server named EX6. EX6 has Exchange Server 2013 installed. 

You move all mailboxes to EX6. 

You need to move the public folders to EX6. The solution must ensure that users can access the public folders after EX5 is decommissioned. 

Which two actions should you perform? (Each correct answer presents part of the solution. Choose two.) 

A. On EX6, create a public folder mailbox. 

B. On EX6, run the New-PublicFolderMigrationRequest cmdlet. 

C. On EX5, modify the replication partners for all of the public folders. 

D. On EX6, run the New-SiteMailboxProvisioningPolicy cmdlet. 

E. On EX5, assign the FolderOwner permission to the Public Folder Management management role group for all of the public folders. 

F. On EX6, run the MoveAllReplicas.ps1 script. 

Answer: A,B 

Explanation: 

B: Use the New-PublicFolderMigrationRequest cmdlet to begin the process of migrating public folders from Microsoft Exchange Server 2007 or Exchange Server 2010 to Exchange Server 2013. 

Note: See step 4 and 5 below. 

Step 1: Download the migration scripts Step 2: Prepare for the migration Step 3: Generate the .csv files Step 4: Create the public folder mailboxes on the Exchange 2013 server Step 5: Start the migration request Example: New-PublicFolderMigrationRequest -SourceDatabase (Get-PublicFolderDatabase -Server <Source server name>) -CSVData (Get-Content <Folder to mailbox map path> -Encoding Byte) -BadItemLimit $BadItemLimitCount 

Step 6: Lock down the public folders on the legacy Exchange server for final migration 

(downtime required) 

Step 7: Finalize the public folder migration (downtime required) 

Step 8: Test and unlock the public folder migration 


Q18.  (Topic 6) 

You have an Exchange Server 2013 organization that contains a database available group (DAG) named DAG1. DAG1 contains three Mailbox servers named Server1, Server2, and Server3. DAG1 contains a mailbox database copy named DB1. 

You implement a lagged copy of DB1 on Server3. The copy lag time is seven days. 

You need to ensure that copies of successfully processed email messages are stored on Server1 and Server2 for seven days. 

What should you modify? 

A. The Shadow Redundancy settings 

B. The Safety Net settings 

C. The settings of DAG1 

D. The settings of DB1 

Answer:

Explanation: 

Microsoft Exchange 2013 Safety Net is a new feature in Exchange Server 2013 that prevents data loss by maintaining a queue of successfully delivered messages. 

The Exchange 2013 Safety Net is essentially a delivery queue that exists on each Exchange 2013 mailbox server. Each time a message is delivered to a database, a copy of that message is held within the Safety Net. The message copy remains in the Safety Net until its expiration date, which is determined by the administrator. 


Q19.  (Topic 6) 

You have an Exchange Server 2013 organization. 

You successfully migrate the public folders from a previous version of Exchange Server. 

You discover that one of the public folder mailboxes almost reached its quota size. 

You need to move some of the public folders in the public folder mailbox to another public folder mailbox. 

What should you run? 

A. Merge PublicFolderMailbox.ps1 

B. Set-MailPublicFolder 

C. New-PublicFolderMigrationRequest 

D. New-PublicFolderMoveRequest 

Answer:

Explanation: 

* If the content of a public folder mailbox begins to exceed your mailbox quotas, you may need to move public folders to a different public folder mailbox. There are a couple ways to do this. To move one or more public folders that don’t contain subfolders, you can use the PublicFolderMoveRequest cmdlets. 

* Use the New-PublicFolderMoveRequest cmdlet to begin the process of moving public folder contents between public folder mailboxes. Moving public folders only moves the physical contents of the public folder; it doesn't change the logical hierarchy. When the move request is completed, you must run the Remove-PublicFolderMoveRequest cmdlet to remove the request or wait until the time specified in the CompletedRequestAgeLimit parameter has passed. The request must be removed before you can run another move request. 


Q20.  (Topic 6) 

You have an Exchange Server 2013 organization. 

You need to ensure that a user named User1 can prevent the deletion of every email message that contains a specific word from all of the mailboxes. The solution must minimize the number of permissions assigned to User1. 

What should you do? 

A. Add User1 to the Records Management management role group. Instruct User1 to run the New-ManagedContentSettings cmdlet. 

B. Add User1 to the Records Management management role group. Instruct User1 to run the New-MailboxSearch cmdlet. 

C. Add User1 to the Discovery Management management role group. Instruct User1 to run the New-ManagedContentSettings cmdlet. 

D. Add User1 to the Discovery Management management role group. Instruct User1 to run the New-MailboxSearch cmdlet. 

Answer:

Explanation: 

* If you want users to be able to use Microsoft Exchange Server 2013 In-Place eDiscovery, you must first authorize them by adding them to the Discovery Management role group. Members of the Discovery Management role group have Full Access mailbox permissions for the Discovery mailbox that's created by Exchange Setup. 

* The New-MailboxSearch cmdlet creates an In-Place eDiscovery search or an In-Place Hold. Unless specified, mailboxes on all Exchange 2013 servers in an organization are searched. You can stop, start, modify, or remove the search.