You administer a Microsoft Windows Server 2012 R2 domain named AIOTestking.com. AIOTestking.com
makes use of Windows Power Shell scripts for configuring settings for network users. These
settings are applied when the users log on to their client computers.
You notice users are able to use their client computers before the scripts have finished running.
AIOTestking.com wants you to make sure the scripts are finished running before the users can use
their computers.
What action should you take?
A.
You should open Group Policy Management Editor and enable the Run logon scripts
asynchronously policy.
B.
You should open Group Policy Management Editor and enable the Run logon scripts
synchronously policy.
C.
You should open Group Policy Management Editor and enable the Run Windows PowerShell
scripts first at user logon, logoff.
D.
You should open Group Policy Management Editor and enable the Run startup scripts
asynchronously policy.
E.
You should open Group Policy Management Editor and configure the Specify maximum wait
time for Group Policy scripts setting.
Explanation:
Logon scripts are applied when the users log on to their client computers. The “Run Logon Scripts
Synchronously” policy waits for the logon script to finish running before Windows Explorer is
allowed to start, effectively preventing the user from using the computer before the script has
finished processing.
Reference:
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc958585.aspx
The actual answer would be “Open GPME and set Always wait for the network at computer startup and logon” Which would set scripts to run Synchronously (B above). Sucky wording.
http://blogs.technet.com/b/grouppolicy/archive/2013/05/23/group-policy-and-logon-impact.aspx
you’re right. Logon scripts are applied when the users log on to their client computers. The “Run Logon Scripts Synchronously” policy waits for the logon script to finish running before Windows Explorer is allowed to start, effectively preventing the user from using the computer before the script has finished processing.