How can you ensure that traffic is load balanced between ABC-CAS1 and ABC-CAS2?

Your role of Messaging Administrator at ABC.com includes the management of the company’s
Exchange 2013 Server infrastructure.

The Exchange Server 2013 infrastructure contains the following three servers.
ABC-MB1 and ABC-MB2 both run the Mailbox Server role.
ABC-CAS1 runs the Client Access Server role.
The corporate firewall maps a public IP address to the private IP address of ABC-CAS1 using NAT
(Network Address Translation) to provide access to ABC-CAS1 from the Internet.
You install another server named ABC-CAS2 into the Exchange environment. ABC-CAS2 runs
the Client Access Server role.
You deploy a Layer 4 hardware load balancer between the Client Access servers and the
corporate firewall to load balance connections between the two servers.
You discover that no traffic is being directed to ABC-CAS2 by the hardware load balancer.
How can you ensure that traffic is load balanced between ABC-CAS1 and ABC-CAS2?

Your role of Messaging Administrator at ABC.com includes the management of the company’s
Exchange 2013 Server infrastructure.

The Exchange Server 2013 infrastructure contains the following three servers.
ABC-MB1 and ABC-MB2 both run the Mailbox Server role.
ABC-CAS1 runs the Client Access Server role.
The corporate firewall maps a public IP address to the private IP address of ABC-CAS1 using NAT
(Network Address Translation) to provide access to ABC-CAS1 from the Internet.
You install another server named ABC-CAS2 into the Exchange environment. ABC-CAS2 runs
the Client Access Server role.
You deploy a Layer 4 hardware load balancer between the Client Access servers and the
corporate firewall to load balance connections between the two servers.
You discover that no traffic is being directed to ABC-CAS2 by the hardware load balancer.
How can you ensure that traffic is load balanced between ABC-CAS1 and ABC-CAS2?

A.
By configuring SSL offloading for the hardware load balancer.

B.
By configuring the default gateway setting in the IP properties of both Client Access servers to
point to the hardware load balancer.

C.
By configuring Network Load Balancing on both Client Access servers.

D.
By configuring the corporate firewall to pass the original source IP address of external
connections.

Explanation:



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