HOTSPOT
Your network contains two Active Directory forests named contoso.com and adatum.com. A two-way forest
trust exists between the forests.
You have custom starter Group Policy objects (GPOs)defined in contoso.com.
You need to ensure that the same set of custom starter GPOs are available in adatum.com.
In the table below, identify which action must be performed for the starter GPOs container in each forest. Make
only one selection in two of the rows. Each correctselection is worth one point.
You need to ensure that the same set of custom starter GPOs are available in adatum.com
HOTSPOT
Your network contains two Active Directory forests named contoso.com and adatum.com. A two-way forest
trust exists between the forests.
You have custom starter Group Policy objects (GPOs)defined in contoso.com.
You need to ensure that the same set of custom starter GPOs are available in adatum.com.
In the table below, identify which action must be performed for the starter GPOs container in each forest. Make
only one selection in two of the rows. Each correctselection is worth one point.
Anyone else think it should be first 2 on the left and last 3 on the right? I dont have an environment to test this with.
In fact, this question can’t possibly be in order. It must be:
contoso – Backup
Adatum – copy, paste, restore from backup, import settings.
Anyone?
My answer would be based on logic:
Contoso: copy, back up.
Adatum: paste, restore from backup, import settings.
I agree with gigi and jimbo
I’m not sure, but it seems that you only can restore
a backup in dem same Domain:
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh967454.aspx
Main sentence “The Restore-GPO cmdlet restores a GPO backup to the original domain from which it was saved. If the original domain is not available, or if the GPO no longer exists in the domain, the cmdlet Fails”
so my opinion is:
contose: copy, backup
adatum: paste, import
contoso.com = Copy
Adatum.com = Past
A copy operation copies an existing, live GPO to the desired destination domain. A new GPO is always created as part of this process. The destination domain can be any trusted domain in which you have the rights to create new GPOs. Simply add the desired forests and domains in GPMC and use GPMC to copy and paste (or drag and drop) the desired GPOs from one domain to another. To copy a GPO, you must have permission to create GPOs in the destination domain.
Should be
Backup — under Starter GPOs container in contoso.com
Restore from backup — under Starter GPOs container in adatum.com
Please note that these are starter GPOs so when you restore it will give you option to see which one is the most updated copy and let you choose which copy to keep.
if this would have been a GPO objects instead of started GPOs then
from contoso.com — copy/backup
to adatum.com — import settings.
The question says:
Make only one selection in two of the rows.
So the only possible right answers are
copy past rafik
or
backup and restore from backup from david
Copy a Starter GPO
This topic has not yet been rated – Rate this topic
Updated: April 17, 2012
Applies To: Windows 8, Windows Server 2008 R2, Windows Server 2012
Copying a Starter GPO
1.Open the Group Policy Management Console. Expand the Starter GPOs node.
2.Right-click the Starter GPO you want to copy and then click Copy .
3.Right-click the Starter GPO node and then click Paste .
4.Click OK .
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc772003.aspx
So only copy and paste are right answers, rest should be empty ?
you can not paste gpo to other domaon in other forst, you hav to import it
so copy and import is correct
there are a two way trust exist between two forest
so i think the answer is
Contoso : copy
adutum : Past
because it is the easiest and allowed solution
http://msdn.microsoft.com/es-es/library/cc785343(v=ws.10).aspx
to use import you must create gpo first
without a trust it would be:
backup (not copy)
create new gpo
import from backup
But with trust:”
copy
paste
Make only one selection in two of the rows. (in two!!!)
Copy. A copy operation allows you to transfer settings from an existing GPO in Active Directory directly into a new GPO. The new GPO created during the copy operation is given a new GUID and is unlinked. You can use a copy operation to transfer settings to a new GPO in the same domain, another domain in the same forest, or a domain in another forest. Because a copy operation uses an existing GPO in Active Directory as its source, trust is required between the source and destination domains. Copy operations are suited for moving Group Policy between production environments, and for migrating Group Policy that has been tested in a test domain or forest to a production environment, as long as there is trust between the source and destination domains.
so its copy from contoso and paste to adatum.
Rafik and rus are right!
rus is correct.
From Technet:
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc733107.aspx
To copy a Group Policy object (right-click method)
In the GPMC console tree, right-click the GPO that you want to copy, and then click Copy .
Do one of the following:
To create a copy of the GPO in the same domain as the source GPO, right-click Group Policy objects , click Paste , specify permissions for the new GPO in the Copy GPO box, and then click OK .
To create a copy of the GPO in a different domain, double-click the destination domain, right-click Group Policy objects , and then click Paste . Answer all the questions in the cross-domain copying wizard that appears, and then click Finish .
Ok so one selection in two of the rows meaning COPY (either contoso or adatum), BACKUP (contoso or adatum) and so forth.. because what you are doing is making one selection in each column!!!
Please see that!
ROWS: left to right and right to left
COLUMN: up and down, down and up
It is Backup/Import
Check it out in this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TFs9Tn_v8yc
To have a better understanding you can watch the whole video (9 minutes 49 seconds) but if you are interested only in the answer to this question go straight to the minute 7:04
By the way, Copy/Paste only works in the same domain.
So Contoso- Backup and adatum- Import?
great choice 🙂
The question says “Make only one selection in two of the rows.”. Only two rows should have an answer checked.
https://sites.google.com/a/pccare.vn/it/ent-admin-pages/gpo-management-facts
Look and read carefully second section on the second table!!!
You can use Copy and Paste on STARTER GPO only on the same domain, when You want to make new GPO.
“To move a starter GPO to another domain, export the starter GPO as a .cab file, then import it in the other domain. You cannot use the backup feature to move a starter GPO to another domain. ”
The question has not section with “Export as a cab. file”, so the only possible selection is on the row “… container in adatum ..” – import. That is the answer.
first: If you want take starter GPO from another domain you have to IMPORT it.
second: you can IMPORT starter GPO only from BACKUP
So finally answer should be:
1 step – BACKUP starter GPO in contoso
2 step – IMPORT backuped GPO to adatum
If it says that you already have “You have customer starter Group Policy Objects (GPOs) defined in contoso.com”
, then doesn’t it mean that you can just Import Settings without having to do anything else?
So, shouldn’t the answer be just “Import Settings”
Also, the question ask to select only one answer out of the two rows. “Make only one selection in two of the rows”. It’s confusing, but I think its asking to Select only one.
REF:Q377,V:30
two-way forest trust – copy paste?