DRAG DROP
A company has one Active Directory Domain Services (AD DS) forest that contains two domains. The
company has a Hyper-V environment that runs Windows Server 2012 R2. The company also has two
virtual machines (VMs) that run Windows Server 2012. The VMs are NOT part of a domain.
You plan to deploy a guest cluster by using a shared virtual hard disk (VHDX). You must use native
disk support that is included in the Failover Clustering feature. The compliance department requires
that you perform as many tasks as possible with your domain account for auditing purposes.
You need to prepare to create the guest cluster.
Which three actions should you perform in sequence? To answer, move the appropriate actions
from the list of actions to the answer area and arrange them in the correct order.
Answer: See the explanation
Note:
* (Box 1)
/ Shared virtual hard disks are only available in Windows Server 2012 R2.
/ Starting in Windows Server 2012 R2, Hyper-V makes it possible to share a virtual hard disk file
between multiple virtual machines. Sharing a virtual hard disk file (.vhdx) provides the shared
storage that is necessary for a Hyper-V guest failover cluster. This is also referred to as a virtual
machine failover cluster.
* (box 2)
There are three kinds of virtual hard disk in Hyper-V: Dynamically Expanding, Fixed Size, and
Differencing.
* (box 3)
Servers must belong to the same Active Directory domain.
Think not. You log in using a domain account and after that you join the domain?????
Furthermore I think the question is talking about basic disks versus dynamic disks and not fixed versus dynamically expanding.
I think this is the correct sequence:
– install server 2012R2 on the Vm’s
– perform a offline domain join
– configure the disks on the VM’s as Basic Disks (cluster storage cannot be dynamic disks)
i agree it clearly states that the vm are not part of a domain as well