HOTSPOT
Your network contains an Active Directory domain named adatum.com. The domain contains a server named
Server1.
Your company implements DirectAccess.
A user named User1 works at a customer’s office. The customer’s office contains a server named Server1.
When User1 attempts to connect to Server1, User1 connects to Server1 in adatum.com.
You need to provide User1 with the ability to connect to Server1 in the customer’s office.
Which Group Policy option should you configure? To answer, select the appropriate option in the answer area.
Hot Area:
Explanation:
Specifies whether the user has Connect and Disconnect options for the DirectAccess entry when the user
clicks the Networking notification area icon.
If the user clicks the Disconnect option, NCA removes the DirectAccess rules from the Name Resolution Policy
Table (NRPT) and the DirectAccess client computer uses whatever normal name resolution is available to theclient computer in its current network configuration, including sending all DNS queries to the local intranet or
Internet DNS servers. Note that NCA does not remove the existing IPsec tunnels and users can still access
intranet resources across the DirectAccess server by specifying IPv6 addresses rather than names.
The ability to disconnect allows users to specify single-label, unqualified names (such as “PRINTSVR”) for local
resources when connected to a different intranet and for temporary access to intranet resources when network
location detection has not correctly determined that the DirectAccess client computer is connected to its own
intranet.
To restore the DirectAccess rules to the NRPT and resume normal DirectAccess functionality, the user clicks
Connect.
Note: If the DirectAccess client computer is on the intranet and has correctly determined its network location,
the Disconnect option has no effect because the rules for DirectAccess are already removed from the NRPT.
If this setting is not configured, users do not have Connect or Disconnect options.