Users accessing the WinXP virtual machine shown in the exhibit report intermittent connectivity to
the corporate network.
The configuration is as follows:
• This virtual machine runs in a DRS/HA cluster of two ESXi hosts.
• The VCP_DCV_Example vSphere Distributed Switch was recently created.
• The WinXP virtual machine was recently migrated from another vSphere Distributed Switch.
• The WinXP virtual machine was able to connect prior to migration to this switch.
• No changes to the VCP_DCV_Example switch have been made since creation.
Which step should the administrator take to resolve the WinXP virtual machine’s intermittent
connectivity to the corporate network?
A.
Add the ESXi host to the switch where the virtual machine is currently running
B.
Disable Port Blocking on the VCP_DCV_Example switch
C.
Disable Port Blocking on the Production port group
D.
Enable Network I/O Control on the switch to better balance I/O
Explanation:
***
The VCP_DCV_Example vSphere Distributed Switch was recently created.
Correct answer “A”.
Seems the wording is going to be the hardest part of the exam, if these questions are any example of the real questions.
Would not the connection be non-existant instead of ‘intermittent’ if the host had not been added to the vDs ?
Note that there is only one uplink and there are two hosts. Both hosts need to have an uplink. If the VM migrates to the host without an uplink, it would lose connectivity. Thus, “A.”
But… if a host does not have an uplink in the vDS, vMotion is able to migrate the VM to that host? vMotion doesn´t check connectivity prior to migrate a VM?
vMotion maybe (and typically is) on a different subnet to production traffic.
These wording are extremely misleading, designed solely to make you fail these fucking exams
it’s pretty easy to see that only 1 host is connected to the switch.