Which cmdlets should you run?

You have an Exchange Server organization. The organization contains servers that have either
Exchange Server 2010 or Exchange Server 2013 installed.
You hire a junior administrator named Admin5. Admin5 is a member of the Recipient Management
management role group.
You discover that Admin5 created two new mailbox-enabled users by using the New-Mailbox
command.
You need to identify which management role provides Admin5 with the permissions to create new
mailbox-enabled users.
Which cmdlets should you run?

You have an Exchange Server organization. The organization contains servers that have either
Exchange Server 2010 or Exchange Server 2013 installed.
You hire a junior administrator named Admin5. Admin5 is a member of the Recipient Management
management role group.
You discover that Admin5 created two new mailbox-enabled users by using the New-Mailbox
command.
You need to identify which management role provides Admin5 with the permissions to create new
mailbox-enabled users.
Which cmdlets should you run?

A.
Get-ManagementRoleEntry and Get-RoleAssignmentPolicy

B.
Get-Rolegroup and Get-ManagementRoleAssignment

C.
Get-ManagementRoleEntry and Get-ManagementRoleAssignment

D.
Get-RolegroupMember and Get-ManagementRoleAssignment

Explanation:
* Use the Get-ManagementRoleEntry cmdlet to retrieve management role entries that have been
configured on management roles.

* Use the Get-ManagementRoleAssignment cmdlet to retrieve management role assignments.



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joe

joe

Keep getting confused between role assignment policy and management role assignment.

Role assignment policy applies to end users, management role assignment applies to admins. Easy when you think about it but I still manage to get mixed up!