You have an Exchange Server 2010 organization.
You deploy a server that has Exchange Server 2013 installed.
You plan to install five additional servers that have Exchange Server 2013 installed.
You are a member of the Organization Management management role group.
Your company hires an external IT consultant named Admin1.
The company’s security policy states that all external consultants must have the minimum number of required
permissions on the network.
You need to ensure that Admin1 can install a server named EX2. The solution must meet the requirements of
the security policy.
Which two tasks should you perform? (Each correct answer presents part of the solution. Choose two.)
A.
Add Admin1 to the Exchange Server role group.
B.
Create a new management role and a new role assignment policy.
C.
Run setup and specify the/newprovisionectservenex2 parameter.
D.
Add Admin1 to the Delegated Setup management role group.
Explanation:
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-gb/library/dd876881(v=exchg.150).aspx
Delegated Setup
The Delegated Setup management role group is one of several built-in role groups that make up the Role
Based Access Control (RBAC) permissions model in Microsoft Exchange Server 2013. Role groups are
assigned one or more management roles that contain the permissions required to perform a given set of tasks.
The members of a role group are granted access to the management roles assigned to the role group.
Administrators who are members of the Delegated Setup role group can deploy servers running Exchange
2013 that have been previously provisioned by a member of the Organization Management role group.
Members of the Delegated Setup role group can only deploy Exchange 2013 servers. They can’t manage the
server after it’s been deployed. To manage a server after it’s been deployed, a user must be a member of the
Server Management role group.