Which two actions should you perform?

Your network contains an Active Directory forest named contoso.com. The forest contains a single
domain. All servers runs Windows Server 2012 R2.The domain contains two domain controllers
named DC1 and DC2. Both domain controllers are virtual machines on a Hyper-V host.
You plan to create a cloned domain controller named DC3 from an image of DC1.
You need to ensure that you can clone DC1.
Which two actions should you perform? (Each correct answer presents part of the solution. Choose
two.)

Your network contains an Active Directory forest named contoso.com. The forest contains a single
domain. All servers runs Windows Server 2012 R2.The domain contains two domain controllers
named DC1 and DC2. Both domain controllers are virtual machines on a Hyper-V host.
You plan to create a cloned domain controller named DC3 from an image of DC1.
You need to ensure that you can clone DC1.
Which two actions should you perform? (Each correct answer presents part of the solution. Choose
two.)

A.
Add the computer account of DC1 to the Cloneable Domain Controllers group.

B.
Create a DCCIoneConfig.xml file on DC1.

C.
Add the computer account of DC3 to the Cloneable Domain Controllers group.

D.
Run the Enable-AdOptionalFeaturecmdlet.

E.
Modify the contents of the DefaultDCCIoneAllowList.xml file on DC1.

Explanation:
* Cloneable Domain Controllers Group (located in the Users container). Membership in this group
dictates whether a DC can or cannot be cloned. This group has some permissions set on the domain
head that should not be removed. Removing these permissions will cause cloning to fail. Also, as a
best practice, DCs shouldn’t be added to the group until you plan to clone and DCs should be
removed from the group once cloning is complete. Cloned DCs will also end up in the Cloneable
Domain Controllers group.
* DCCloneConfig.xml is an XML configuration file that contains all of the settings the cloned DC will
take when it boots. This includes network settings, DNS, WINS, AD site name, new DC name and
more.



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Bjorn

Bjorn

Answer: A;B

There is a group called cloneable Domain Controllers and you can find it in the Users container. Membership in this group dictates whether a DC can or cannot be cloned. (Answer A)

There’s one key difference between a cloned DC and a DC that is being restored to a previous snapshot: DCCloneConfig.XML
DCCloneConfig.xml is an XML configuration file that contains all of the settings the cloned DC will take when it boots. This includes network settings, DNS, WINS, AD site name, new DC name and more. This file can be generated (created => Answer A) in a few different ways.

– The New-ADDCCloneConfig cmdlet in PowerShell
– By hand with an XML editor
– By editing an existing config file, again with an XML editor (Notepad is not an XML editor.)

From: http://blogs.technet.com/b/askpfeplat/archive/2012/10/01/virtual-domain-controller-cloning-in-windows-server-2012.aspx