You are the systems administrator for your company. The network consists of a Windows Essential Business Server 2008 environment. All client computers on the network run Windows Vista.
You have configured multiple logon scripts in a Group Policy Object. You want to ensure that the system waits for the logon scripts to finish running before starting the Windows Explorer interface program and creating the desktop.
Which policy setting should you configure
A.
Computer ConfigurationAdministrative TemplatesSystemScriptsMaximum wait time for Group Policy scripts
B.
Computer ConfigurationAdministrative TemplatesSystemScriptsRun logon scripts synchronously
C.
User ConfigurationAdministrative TemplatesSystemScriptsRun logon scripts visible
D.
User ConfigurationAdministrative TemplatesSystemScriptsRun legacy logon scripts hidden
Explanation:
You should configure the Computer ConfigurationAdministrative TemplatesSystemScriptsRun logon scripts synchronously policy setting. When enabled, this policy setting directs the system to wait for the logon scripts to finish running before it starts the Windows Explorer interface program and creates the desktop. If you enable this setting, Windows Explorer does not start until the logon scripts have finished running. The Run logon scripts synchronously policy setting ensures that logon script processing is complete before the user starts working.You should not configure the Computer ConfigurationAdministrative TemplatesSystemScriptsMaximum wait time for Group Policy scripts policy setting. This policy setting specifies how long the system will wait for scripts applied by Group Policy to run. This setting limits the total time allowed for all logon, startup, and shutdown scripts applied by Group Policy to finish running.
You should not configure the User ConfigurationAdministrative TemplatesSystemScriptsRun logon scripts visible policy setting because this policy setting is used to display the instructions in the logon scripts as they run.
You should not configure the User ConfigurationAdministrative TemplatesSystemScriptsRun legacy logon scripts hidden policy setting because this policy setting is used to hide the instructions in logon scripts written for Windows NT 4.0 and earlier.