You are the network administrator for your company. The network consists of a single Active Directory domain. All servers run Windows Server 2003. All client computers run Windows XP Professional.
The network consists of three physical subnets, which correspond to the three buildings on the company’s campus, as shown in the Network Diagram exhibit.
All servers have manually configured IP addresses. All client computers receive their TCP/IP configuration information from a DHCP server located on the Building1 subnet. The DHCP server has one scope configured for each subnet. Users on the Building2 subnet and the Building3 subnet report that they periodically cannot connect to network resources located on any subnet.
You discover that during times of high network usage, client computers in Building2 and Building3 are configured as shown in the Network Connection Details exhibit.
You need to ensure that all client computers receive valid IP addresses for their subnet even during times of high network usage.
What should you do?
A.
Install one DHCP server on the Building2 subnet and one on the Building3 subnet. On each DHCP server, configure identical scopes for each subnet.
B.
Install one DHCP server on the Building2 subnet and one on the Building3 subnet. On each DHCP server, configure a single subnet-specific scope.
C.
Configure one DHCP relay agent on the Building2 subnet and one on the Building3 subnet to forward DHCP requests to the Building1 subnet DHCP server.
D.
Configure an administrative template in the Default Domain Policy Group Policy object (GPO) to disable Automatic Private IP Addressing (APIPA) on the client computers.