What level of access does User1 have to Folder1?

You have a computer named Computer1 that runs Windows 10.
On Computer1, C:\\Folder1 has the permissions configured as shown in the following table.

You share C:\\Folder1 as Folder1 and you grant access to the Everyone group.
Folder1 has the following share settings:

What level of access does User1 have to Folder1?

You have a computer named Computer1 that runs Windows 10.
On Computer1, C:\\Folder1 has the permissions configured as shown in the following table.

You share C:\\Folder1 as Folder1 and you grant access to the Everyone group.
Folder1 has the following share settings:

What level of access does User1 have to Folder1?

A.
User1 cannot see the Folder1 share on the network and cannot connect to Folder1.

B.
User1 can see the Folder1 share on the network and can connect to Folder1.

C.
User1 cannot see the Folder1 share on the network but can connect to Folder1.

D.
User1 can see the Folder1 share on the network but cannot connect to Folder1.

Explanation:
https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/jj635727(v=wps.630).aspx



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DutchGuy

DutchGuy

I think this is D because User1 has a deny on reading Folder1.
He can see the share but not read it.

Sam

Sam

Agree with you, D is correct answer. I tested it in my testing environment. Access-based enumeration affect only files and folders in shared folder. There are no affect on share’s list

Michael

Michael

D is correct

Bullseye

Bullseye

I’m not so sure about this question to be honest.
This is because of the “FolderEnumerationMode” property which is set to AccessBased.

https://technet.microsoft.com/nl-nl/library/dd772681(v=ws.10).aspx
“Access-based enumeration displays only the files and folders that a user has permissions to access.”

User1 has a explicit DENY entry on the folder. This will mean that he can’t connect because he has no permissions. This leaves answers A & D.
In my opinion, because of the ABE entry (why would the share settings be presented to you in a exhibit?) which explicitly denies User1 entry to the folder, I believe that User1 also can’t see the folder.

Bullseye

Bullseye

So to be clear, I think the presented answer is correct.

ptrillides

ptrillides

i have simulated this Question.
When you give Share Permissions to folder1 without Folder1$ dollar sign , the folder is always visible to the network and bypass the ntfs permisions ( I know is awkward )
Then the NTFS permissions take place and prevent you from access the folder.

Try it your self.
Answer is D
Please message me in [email protected]

Dima

Dima

The presented answer is correct indeed, Access-based enumeration hides folders when you don’t have the proper permissions.

Bullseye

Bullseye

I did some more digging after ptrillides’ reply. He’s right.
For people wanting sources:

https://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/windowsserver/en-US/33c73233-cf7b-420f-bf59-21abe16035b5/abe-not-working?forum=winservergen
https://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/windowsserver/en-US/43835987-7f6f-4b9a-92ef-368244e31a7e/unable-to-hide-shared-folders?forum=winserverfiles

“ABE works great for the files and folders in a share, but it will not hide the share itself from a users view. Just to clarify, if you share two folders, each folder has different NTFS permissions, which is what ABE looks at, no matter what the permissions are, if you go to the UNC path of a server to see what shares are available (\\ServerName), you will still be able to see all unhidden shares. ABE only takes effect once you have opened a share to work with the files and folders within.”

Answer is D.

Reya

Reya

Passed already.

Some questions in my real test:

QUESTION 53
You plan to use the computer to test applications.
You need to install Windows Insider Preview builds on the computer. What should you do?

A. From Group Policy, configure the Add features to Windows 10 settings.
B. From the Settings app, configure the Advanced options for Windows Update.
C. From Group Policy, configure the Windows Update settings.
D. From the Settings app, select Developer mode.

Answer: B
Explanation:

QUESTION 54
Note: This question is part of a series of questions that use the same set of answer choices. Each answer choice may be used once, more than once, or not at all.
You have a computer named Computer1 that has storage configured as shown in the following table.

Pool1 contains a storage space named Space1 that is 300 GB.
Pool3 contains a storage space named Space2 that is 100 GB.
Pool2 is empty.
You discover that Distc2 experiences physical errors.
You need to ensure that all of the data in Space1 is stored on other disks in the storage pool only.
What should you use?

A. Add-PhysicalDisk
B. Diskpart
C. New-VirtualDisk
D. Remove-PhysicalDisk
E. Resize-VirtualDisk
F. Set-StoragePool
G. Subst
H. Update-Disk

Answer: F
Explanation:

QUESTION 55
Note: This question is part of a series of a questions that use the same set of answer choices. Each answer choice may be used once, more than once, or not at all.
You have a computer named Computer1 that has storage configured as shown in the following table.

Pool1 contains a storage space named Space1 that is 300 GB.
Pool3 contains a storage space named Space2 that is 100 GB.
Pool2 is empty.
Disk8 fails.
You add a new disk named Disk9 to Pool3.
You need to remove Disk8 from Pool3.
What should you use?

A. Add-PhysicalDisk
B. Diskpart
C. New-VirtualDisk
D. Remove-PhysicalDisk
E. Resize-VirtualDisk
F. Set-StoragePool
G. Subst
H. Update-Disk

Answer: D
Explanation:

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