You need to ensure that the settings in GPO1 supersede the settings in GPO2

Your network contains an Active Directory domain named contoso.com.

You have an organizational unit (OU) named Sales and an OU named Engineering.

You have two Group Policy Objects (GPOs) named GPO1 and GPO2. GPO1 and GPO2 are linked to the Sales OU and contain multiple settings.

You discover that GPO2 has a setting that conflicts with a setting in GPO1. When the policies are applied, the setting in GPO2 takes effect.

You need to ensure that the settings in GPO1 supersede the settings in GPO2. The solution must ensure that all non-conflicting settings in both GPOs are applied.

What should you do?

Your network contains an Active Directory domain named contoso.com.

You have an organizational unit (OU) named Sales and an OU named Engineering.

You have two Group Policy Objects (GPOs) named GPO1 and GPO2. GPO1 and GPO2 are linked to the Sales OU and contain multiple settings.

You discover that GPO2 has a setting that conflicts with a setting in GPO1. When the policies are applied, the setting in GPO2 takes effect.

You need to ensure that the settings in GPO1 supersede the settings in GPO2. The solution must ensure that all non-conflicting settings in both GPOs are applied.

What should you do?

A.
Configure Restricted Groups.

B.
Configure the link order.

C.
Link the GPO to the Sales OU.

D.
Link the GPO to the Engineer OU.

E.
Enable loopback processing in merge mode.

F.
Modify the Group Policy permissions.

G.
Configure WMI filtering.

H.
Configure Group Policy Permissions.

I.
Enable loopback processing in replace mode.

J.
Enable block inheritance.

Explanation:
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc757050(v=ws.10).aspx#BKMK_change



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