Your network contains a computer named Computer1 that runs Windows 7. You need to verify if Computer1 has active DirectAccess connections to the network.
What should you do?
A.
From Network Connections, right-click the active network connection, and then click Status.
B.
From Network Connections, select the active network connection, and then click Diagnose this connection.
C.
From Windows Firewall with Advanced Security, click Monitoring, and then click Connection Security Rules.
D.
From Windows Firewall with Advanced Security, click Monitoring, click Security Associations, and then click Main Mode.
Correct answer should be – D “click monitoring, and then click connection security rules”
ref: http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ee844097%28v=ws.10%29.aspx
correct me if i’m wrong
Opssss I mean “C”
It looks like the technet article you linked is for “Intranet Management Server Cannot Connect to a DirectAccess Client”, so the server establishing a management connection with the client.
From the article: “Just like the infrastructure tunnel, success of the tunnel mode security associations (SAs) for the management tunnel depends on the connection security rules configured on DirectAccess clients and the DirectAccess server.”
The connection security rules establish the basis for connections to the server, but what is established are security associations. You can view active security associations in WFAS by viewing Monitoring -> Security Associations -> Main Mode. This shows any connection that is established whether it is encrypted or not because Main Mode is the first handshake that determines the rest of the connection properties. If it is encrypted, you will also see the connection listed in the Quick Mode option, but Main Mode shows all SAs.
Correct answer is D.