Your company has an Active Directory Domain Services (AD DS) domain. You install the Remote
Desktop Session Host (RD Session Host) role service on a server that runs Windows Server 2008 R2.
All RD Session Host servers are located in an Organizational Unit (OU) named RDSessionHosts. All
user accounts are located in an OU named Employees. Users connect to multiple RD Session Host
servers by using the Remote Desktop Connection client on their Windows 7 client computers. You
need to ensure that users can access the files stored in their own Documents folders regardless of
the RD Session Host server to which they are connected What should you do?
A.
Create a mandatory profile on each client computer.
B.
Create a mandatory profile on each RD Session Host server.
C.
Create a Group Policy object (GPO) that redirects the Documents folder, and link the GPO to the
employees OU.
D.
Create a Group Policy object (GPO) that redirects the Documents folder, and link the GPO to the
RDSessionHosts OU
Explanation:
Folder Redirection User settings and user files are typically stored in the local user profile, under the
Users folder. The files in local user profiles can be accessed only from the current computer, which
makes it difficult for users who use more than one computer to work with their data and
synchronize settings between multiple computers. Two technologies exist to address this problem:
Roaming Profiles and Folder Redirection. Both technologies have their advantages, and they can be
used separately or together to create a seamless user experience from one computer to another.
They also provide additional options for administrators managing user data. Folder Redirection lets
administrators redirect the path of a folder to a new location. The location can be a folder on the
local computer or a directory on a network file share. Users can work with documents on a server as
if the documents were based on a local drive. The documents in the folder are available to the user
from any computer on the network. Folder Redirection is located under Windows Settings in the
console tree when you edit domain-based Group Policy by using the Group Policy Management
Console (GPMC). The path is [Group Policy Object Name]\User
Configuration\Policies\Windows Settings\Folder Redirection . http://technet.microsoft.com/enus/library/cc732275.aspx