Which cmdlet should you run?

You have a cluster named Cluster1 that contains two nodes. Both nodes run Windows Server
2012 R2. Cluster1 hosts a virtual machine named VM1 that runs Windows Server 2012 R2.
You notice that VM1 is marked as being in a critical state in the cluster.
You verify that VM1 is functioning correctly.
You need to ensure that VM1 is no longer marked as being in a critical state.
Which cmdlet should you run?

You have a cluster named Cluster1 that contains two nodes. Both nodes run Windows Server
2012 R2. Cluster1 hosts a virtual machine named VM1 that runs Windows Server 2012 R2.
You notice that VM1 is marked as being in a critical state in the cluster.
You verify that VM1 is functioning correctly.
You need to ensure that VM1 is no longer marked as being in a critical state.
Which cmdlet should you run?

A.
Remove-ClusterVmMonitoredItem

B.
Remove-ClusterResourceDependency

C.
Reset-ClusterVMMonitoredState

D.
Clear-ClusterNode

Explanation:
Remove-ClusterVmMonitoredItem actually removes the monitoring so nothing will happen
Remove-ClusterResourceDependency – self explanatory has to do with dependencies, not critical
state
Reset-ClusterVMMonitoredState – This cmdlet resets the Application Critical state of a virtual
machine, so that the virtual machine is no longer marked as being in a critical state in the cluster
Clear-ClusterNode – This cmdlet helps ensure that the failover cluster configuration has been
completely removed from a node that was evicted.
https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/%5Clibrary/Hh847312(v=WPS.630).aspx



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