You deploy a custom image to a computer and discover that the Telnet Client feature is disabled.
You need to ensure that the Telnet Client feature is enabled when you deploy the image.
You must achieve this goal in the minimum amount of time.
What should you do?
A.
Enable the Telnet Client feature on the computer. Generalize the computer and capture the
image.
B.
Create an unattended file that enables Telnet Client. Generalize the computer and specify the
unattended file. Capture the image.
C.
Mount the image. Run Ocsetup.exe TelnetClient. Commit the changes and unmount the image.
D.
Mount the image. Run Dism.exe and specify /image and /enable-feature:TelnetClient switches.
Commit the changes and unmount the image.
Explanation:
NOTE: “when you deploy the image.” Implies for future installations, not the current one. Therefore
the imagefile must be updated.
Dism Deployment Image Servicing and Management (DISM) is a command-line tool used to service
Windows® images offline before deployment. You can use it to install, uninstall, configure, and
update Windows features, packages, drivers, and international settings. Subsets of the DISM
servicing commands are also available for servicing a running operating system. Windows 7
introduces the DISM command-line tool. You can use DISM to service a Windows image or to
prepare a Windows PE image. DISM replaces Package Manager (Pkgmgr.exe), PEimg, and Intlcfg in
Windows Vista, and includes new features to improve the experience for offline servicing. You can
use DISM to perform the following actions:
– Prepare a Windows PE image.
– Enable or disable Windows features within an image.
– Upgrade a Windows image to a different edition.
– Add, remove, and enumerate packages.
– Add, remove, and enumerate drivers.
– Apply changes based on the offline servicing section of an unattended answer file.
– Configure international settings.
– Implement powerful logging features.
– Service operating systems such as Windows Vista with SP1 and Windows Server 2008.– Service a 32-bit image from a 64-bit host and service a 64-bit image from a 32-bit host.
– Service all platforms (32-bit, 64-bit, and Itanium).
– Use existing Package Manager scripts.