Which command should you run?

HOTSPOT
You have an Exchange Server 2013 organization that contains 10 mailbox servers.
You have a custom workload management policy named App1Policy. App1Policy is applied to three Mailbox
servers.
You deploy a new Mailbox server named EX11.
You need to ensure that App1Policy is applied to EX11.
Which command should you run? (To answer, configure the appropriate options in the answer area.)
Hot Area:

HOTSPOT
You have an Exchange Server 2013 organization that contains 10 mailbox servers.
You have a custom workload management policy named App1Policy. App1Policy is applied to three Mailbox
servers.
You deploy a new Mailbox server named EX11.
You need to ensure that App1Policy is applied to EX11.
Which command should you run? (To answer, configure the appropriate options in the answer area.)
Hot Area:

Answer:

Explanation:
An Exchange workload is an Exchange Server feature, protocol, or service that’s been explicitly defined for the
purposes of Exchange system resource management.
Each Exchange workload consumes system resources such as CPU, mailbox database operations, or Active
Directory requests to run user requests or background work. Examples of Exchange workloads include Outlook
Web App, Exchange ActiveSync, mailbox migration, and mailbox assistants.
There are two ways to manage Exchange workloads: by monitoring the health of system resources or by
controlling how resources are consumed by individual users (sometimes called user throttling in Exchange
2010).
Managing workloads based on the health of system resources is new in Microsoft Exchange Server 2013.
Controlling how resources are consumed by individual users was possible in Exchange Server 2010, and this
capability has been expanded for Exchange Server 2013.
You can customize the workload management settings if you want to change the default behavior of the feature
for the needs of your environment.
SECTION1
Use the Set-ExchangeServer cmdlet to set Exchange attributes in Active Directory for a specified server.
(EX11)
Not a throttling policy
Scenario details a workload management policy
Use the Set-ResourcePolicy cmdlet to set the properties of a custom resource policy.
SECTION2
The Identity parameter specifies the GUID, distinguished name (DN), or name of the server.
Need EX11 as it is the name of the server
SECTION3
The WorkloadManagementPolicy parameter specifies the name of a workload management policy to apply in
Active Directory. (App1Policy)
Not a throttling policy
Set-ExchangeServer: Exchange 2013 Help



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