You need to perform a bare-metal recovery of Server1 by using the Windows Recovery Environment (Windows RE)

You have a server named Server1 that runs Windows Server 2012 R2.
Each day, Server1 is backed up fully to an external disk.
On Server1, the disk that contains the operating system fails.
You replace the failed disk.
You need to perform a bare-metal recovery of Server1 by using the Windows Recovery
Environment (Windows RE).
What should you do?

You have a server named Server1 that runs Windows Server 2012 R2.
Each day, Server1 is backed up fully to an external disk.
On Server1, the disk that contains the operating system fails.
You replace the failed disk.
You need to perform a bare-metal recovery of Server1 by using the Windows Recovery
Environment (Windows RE).
What should you do?

A.
Run the Start-WBVolumeRecovery cmdlet and specify the -backupset parameter.

B.
Run the Get-WBBareMetalRecovery cmdlet and specify the -policy parameter.

C.
Run the wbadmin.exe start recovery command and specify the -recoverytarget
parameter.

D.
Run the wbadmin.exe start sysrecovery command and specify the -backuptarget
parameter.

Explanation:
wbadmin start sysrecovery
Performs a system recovery (bare metal recovery) using the parameters that you specify.
This subcommand can be run only from the Windows Recovery Environment, and it is not
listed by default in the usage text of Wbadmin.



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sysadmin

sysadmin

more useless CLI trivia. BTW. a regular install DVD has the GUI Windows backup. Nevertheless, you can always look up commands on google in a few seconds. No need to memorize CLI commands that you’ll be using once in a few years.

The answers from V.2 without the arguments.

The answers from V.2 without the arguments.

D. Run the wbadmin.exe start sysrecovery command and specify the -backuptarget
parameter.