1.
You are the desktop administrator for your company. You are getting ready to install Windows XP Professional on a new computer. You previously copied the Windows XP source files to a folder on Server1 and shared the folder using XPPro as a share name. You boot the computer with a Windows 98 boot floppy. You want to begin the Windows XP installation program. What should you do?
Correct Answer
A. Run //Server1/XPPro/Winnt.exe.
Explanation
To start a Windows XP installation, run either Winnt.exe or Winnt32.exe. If you are booted to a 32-bit Windows environment such as Windows 95, 98, ME, NT 4 (or NT 3.5), 2000, or XP, run Winnt32.exe. If you are booted to a 16-bit environment, such as MS-DOS or Windows 3.x, run Winnt.exe.
Note: Booting with a Windows 95/98 boot floppy boots you to a 16-bit, command-line DOS environment. You need to use Winnt.exe to start the installation.
2.
You are the desktop administrator for your company. You are preparing to install Windows XP Professional on a computer. The computer is a 266 MHz computer with a single 6 GB drive with three partitions. Both the D: and the E: drives have 1.5 GB of free space. You consult the Windows XP HCL and discover that the computer's CD-ROM drive is not supported under Windows XP. The computer is currently running Windows 95, which supports the CD-ROM drive. You want to install Windows XP on this computer from the source files on the Windows XP installation CD. What should you do?
Correct Answer
A. Boot the computer to Windows 95 and run Winnt32 /makelocalsource.
Explanation
Winnt32 uses switches to control the installation process. The /makelocalsource switch makes Setup copy the installation files to the local hard drive. Thus, the installation is run off the local hard drive, and you don't need access to the unsupported CD-ROM drive.
3.
You are the desktop administrator for your company. You are installing Windows XP Professional on a Pentium II computer. The computer has two hard drives, each of which contains a single 8 GB FAT32 partition. Windows 98 is installed on the first drive. You want to use both Windows 98 and Windows XP. You also want the existing directories and data to remain on the first drive. What should you do to minimize the amount of effort while achieving the desired results?
Correct Answer
C. Install a new Windows XP installation on the second drive.
Explanation
For this scenario, install Windows XP on the second drive. The installation program will not remove the existing data directories and files on the first drive, and you will be able to boot to both Windows 98 and Windows XP.
If you upgrade from Windows 98 to Windows XP, Windows 98 will no longer exist. Deleting the existing partition without backing up the data would result in a data loss. Backing up the data, reformatting the partition, and installing Windows XP would also remove Windows 98.
4.
You are the desktop administrator for your company. Your company uses Windows XP Professional as a desktop operating system. You just installed a new Windows XP Professional using the same distribution share on the network that you normally use to install new Windows XP Professional computers. You then boot to the new operating system and log on as Administrator so you can begin installing a specialized application for the target user. After you log on, the operating system appears unstable. You want to verify that the operating system files were copied from the network share without becoming corrupted. What should you do?
Correct Answer
A. Run the Sfc.exe /scannow command.
Explanation
You can use System File Checker (Sfc.exe) to verify the integrity of protected system files. Normally, Windows XP’s Windows File Protection feature detects changes to protected system files and replaces damaged or deleted system files with a cached copy. However, this scenario illustrates an example of how changes to protected files can occur when the operating system is not running. Therefore, Windows File Protection will not be triggered, and you will have to manually scan the system files using Sfc.exe. Use the /scan now switch to perform a scan immediately.
The /scanboot switch configures the operating system to perform a scan every time the operating system boots. The /revert switch changes the scan behaviour back to the default, and the /cachesize = size switch configures how much disk space can be used to store cached versions of protected system files.
5.
You are the network administrator for your company. To simplify administration, you have created a shared folder that holds the Windows XP Professional installation files. Administrators use this folder to install new workstations. You receive a new service pack, and you want to modify the installation folder to include the service pack. What should you do?
Correct Answer
A. Run the Update.exe -s command in the service pack, specifying the path to the network share.
Explanation
To apply a new service pack to a distribution folder, use the Update.exe -s:[distribution_folder] switch. This applies the service pack changes to the installation files in the folder, updating all files to the latest files. Administrators can then install Windows XP as usual to get the latest copy.
6.
You are the desktop administrator for your company. You are installing Windows XP Professional on a Pentium II computer. The computer has two hard drives, each of which contains a single 8 GB FAT32 partition. Windows 98 is installed on the first drive. You want to use both Windows 98 and Windows XP. You also want the existing directories and data to remain on the first drive. What should you do to minimize the amount of effort while achieving the desired results?
Correct Answer
B. Install a new Windows XP installation on the second drive.
Explanation
For this scenario, install Windows XP on the second drive. The installation program will not remove the existing data directories and files on the first drive, and you will be able to boot to both Windows 98 and Windows XP.
If you upgrade from Windows 98 to Windows XP, Windows 98 will no longer exist. Deleting the existing partition without backing up the data would result in a data loss. Backing up the data, reformatting the partition, and installing Windows XP would also remove Windows 98.
7.
You are the desktop administrator for your company. Your company has recently decided to upgrade ten Windows 2000 Professional computers to Windows XP Professional. You create a network share called XPpro on Server1 with the Windows XP installation files. You want to make sure that the most recent device drivers are used during the installation. You download the dynamic update file and extract it to the Updates share on Server1. You want to install Windows XP from the network and use the most updated drivers from the network share. What should you do? (Choose two. Each correct choice is part of the correct solution.)
Correct Answer(s)
B. Run //Server1/XPpro/winnt32 /duprepare://Server1/Updates.
D. Run //Server1/XPpro/winnt32 /dushare://Server1/Updates.
Explanation
Use the /duprepare and /dushare switches with the Winnt32 command to perform an installation of Windows XP Professional from a network share using dynamic updates downloaded from Microsoft. For example, if Tiffany had downloaded the dynamic updates and extracted them to the \\Server1\Updates share, she would do the following to install Windows XP:
Run \\Server1\XPpro\winnt32 /duprepare:\\Server1\Updates to ready the files for use.
Run \\Server1\XPpro\winnt32 /dushare:\\Server1\Updates to start the installation with the downloaded update files.
The /dudisable switch prevents the dynamic update from occurring. The Update.exe command and the -s switch are not required because you are not slipstreaming a service pack. You also do not need to specify a source for the installation files when running Winnt32 from the \\Server1\XPpro share (that would use the /s switch).
8.
You are the desktop administrator for your company. You are installing Windows XP Professional on a new computer that has the following hardware: PCI video adapter PCI network adapter 24-bit sound card ISA SCSI adapter and one internal SCSI hard disk CD-ROM drive Floppy drive You boot to the Windows XP Professional CD-ROM and begin the installation. During the installation, you receive an error message indicating that Setup cannot locate a hard drive. You verify that the SCSI hard drive is in working condition and is supported under Windows XP. You also verify SCSI IDs and terminations. You then restart the installation but receive the same error message. You want to successfully complete the installation of Windows XP Professional on this computer. What should you do?
Correct Answer
A. Restart the Installation, and choose F6 to install the driver for the SCSI adapter.
Explanation
You need to supply the appropriate SCSI adapter driver from a floppy disk and restart the installation of Windows XP. Most likely the driver for the SCSI adapter is not accessible to Windows XP Professional, which is preventing XP from locating the hard drive attached to the SCSI adapter. During the text-mode portion of the XP installation, you will see an informational message at the bottom that says to press F6 if you need to install a third-party SCSI or RAID driver.
Replacing the SCSI adapter reduces the overall functionality and configuration options of your computer, and would be costly to do on all machines. The new computer should already be configured to boot from the hard drive, and the IRQ for the SCSI adapter should also be pre-set.
9.
You are the desktop administrator for ABC.com. The ABC.com network consists of a single Active
Directory domain named ABC.com. All client computers on the network are configured to run
Windows XP Professional.
The ABC.com users who are assigned laptop computers often work from home. These laptop
computers are set up specifically to make a connection to the network and the Internet without any
problems. After a few weeks, several laptop users complained that they cannot access the shared
folders on the laptop computers even when working at the office.
You check and discover that these users have permission to access the shared folders. You thus
decide to make the necessary modifications in the local GPO on all laptop computers.
Which actions should you take to make sure of continued Internet protection and provide access
to the shared folders? (Choose Two.)
Correct Answer(s)
A. You should configure the Windows Firewall on the laptop computers.
C. You should change the local GPO by deselecting the Prohibit the use of ICF on your DNS
domain network option.
10.
You work as the network administrator at ABC.com. All client computers on the ABC.com network
are configured to run Windows XP Professional.
AnA ABC.com user named Kara Lang is assigned a laptop computer named ABC-WS15. She
complains that she gets random error messages regarding missing .dll files on ABC-WS15 when it
is not connected to the docking station.
After some troubleshooting, you discover that the device driver uses the .dll file mentioned in the
error messages as an external storage device. The storage device is in turn linked to the docking
station of Kara Lang. There are no random error messages when she works in docked mode. To
ensure productivity you need to make sure that this incident does not recur.
How can this be accomplished? (Choose THREE. Each answer forms part of the solution.)
Correct Answer(s)
B. By creating a new hardware profile named KingUndocked by copying the default hardware
profile of ABC-WS15.
D. By disabling the storage device in the undocked hardware profile
E. By informing the user too restart ABC-WS15 using the undocked hardware profile.