You are the newly appointed enterprise administrator at Company.com. The Company.com network
consists of two Active Directory domains. These domains have a two-way trust relationship. The
users in the domain can only log onto their client workstations in their respective domains. However,
during a routine monitoring you notice that the domain controllers display the following error
message stating that the clock skew is too great. You check and discover that it occur when the users
in one domain log on to the client workstations in the other domain. You have received instructions
from the CIO to make sure that the users in both domains is able to log onto each other’s client
workstations in any domain at Company.com. What should you do?
A.
The best option is to include the Net Time /setsntp on a startup script and run it on the all the
client workstations.
B.
The best option is to set up the primary domain controller (PDC) emulator in each domain to
synchronize its clock with the same external time source.
C.
The best option is to decrease the Maximum tolerance for computer clock synchronization setting
in the default Domain Group Policy object (GPO).
D.
The best option is to include the Net Time /querysmtp on a startup script and run it on the all the
client workstations.