Which backup type should you identify for each volume?

HOTSPOT
You have a server named Server1 that runs Windows Server 2012 R2. The volumes on
Server1 are configured as shown in the following table.

A new corporate policy states that backups must use Windows Azure Online Backup
whenever possible.
You need to identify which backup methods you must use to back up Server1. The solution
must use Windows Azure Online Backup whenever possible.
Which backup type should you identify for each volume?
To answer, select the appropriate backup type for each volume in the answer area.


HOTSPOT
You have a server named Server1 that runs Windows Server 2012 R2. The volumes on
Server1 are configured as shown in the following table.

A new corporate policy states that backups must use Windows Azure Online Backup
whenever possible.
You need to identify which backup methods you must use to back up Server1. The solution
must use Windows Azure Online Backup whenever possible.
Which backup type should you identify for each volume?
To answer, select the appropriate backup type for each volume in the answer area.


Answer:

Explanation:
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/jj614621.aspx
http://technet.microsoft.com/zh-cn/library/hh831419.aspx



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heb0r

heb0r

volume1 can also be backed up with azure online backup

sysadmin

sysadmin

Cloud backup is available for these Windows Server operating systems: Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1, Windows Server 2012, and Windows Server 2012 R2. Windows Server Essentials 2012 and Windows Server Essentials 2012 R2 can also subscribe to Cloud Backup in Azure using an Add-In that integrates with the Essentials Dashboard.
Volumes with files to be backed up must be local fixed disks (not network shares) and be formatted with NTFS.
Volumes cannot be read-only, and if locked with BitLocker Drive Encryption, must be unlocked before backup.
The maximum retention time for your production data in Azure is 30 days.
The maximum size of a single backup from a specific volume is 850 GB.
The only suitable workload for protection by Windows Server Cloud Backup is the “File and Folder” type. System State and Bare Metal Recovery (BMR), as well as entire system (“C:\”) drive backups are not supported. (Consider Windows Server Backup and DPM for protection of System State and BMR.)
Backup of application data like Active Directory, Exchange, SharePoint, and SQL Server is not directly supported. (SQL Server backups you create to ‘flat’ .BAK file(s) could be included in file and folder backups.)

They have to be unlocked, though