Your network contains an Active Directory domain named contoso.com.
You have a DHCP server named Server1 that runs Windows Server 2008.
You install Windows Server 2012 R2 on a server named Server2.You install the DHCP
Server server role on Server2.
You need to migrate the DHCP services from Server1 to Server2. The solution must meet
the following requirements:
• Ensure that existing leases are migrated.
• Prevent lease conflicts.
Which three actions should you perform? (Each correct answer presents part of the solution.
Choose three.)
A.
On Server1, run the Export-DhcpServercmdlet.
B.
On Server1, run the Stop-Service cmdlet.
C.
On Server2, run the Receive-SmigServerDatacmdlet.
D.
On Server2, run the Stop-Service cmdlet.
E.
On Server2, run the Import-DhcpServercmdlet.
F.
On Server1, run the Send-SmigServerDatacmdlet.
Has logic: Stop, Export, Import.
export-dhcpserver cmdlet doesn’t exist on server 2008
Actually you are right.
The “Export-DhcpServer” should be made from the Windows Server 2012 !!!
Source :
http://blogs.technet.com/b/teamdhcp/archive/2012/09/11/migrating-existing-dhcp-server-deployment-to-windows-server-2012-dhcp-failover.aspx
So if export is impossible from Server1, the Windows Server 2008 server, then A, as part of the answer, has to be wrong. It’s also possible that whoever constructed this exam over at Microshaft completely forgot, or never knew, that export isn’t available on Windows Server 2008. The presented answer may still be “correct”.
As Anogh stated above, you run the export from the 2012 server.
with the –ComputerName parameter pointing to the 2008 server of course.
Source system must be at least Windows Server 2008.
Start PowerShell prompt with elevated rights.
First: Export-dhcpserver
This PowerShell command can run locally at the server you want to export DHCP Server settings from or remote from the server you want to export DHCP Server settings to.
Second: Import-dhcpserver
Third: Stop DHCP server on the source server.