Your network contains multiple servers that run Windows Server 2012.
The network contains a Storage Area Network (SAN) that only supports Fibre Channel
connections.
You have two failover clusters. The failover clusters are configured as shown in the following
table.
Only the members of Cluster1 can connect to the SAN.
You plan to implement 15 highly available virtual machines on Cluster2. All of the virtual
machines will be stored in a single shared folder.
You need to ensure that the VHD files of the virtual machines can be stored on the SAN.
What should you do? (Each correct answer presents a complete solution. Choose all that
apply.)
A.
From a node in Cluster2, create a Virtual Fibre Channel SAN.
B.
From a node in Cluster1, create a Virtual Fibre Channel SAN.
C.
From Cluster1, add the iSCSI Target Server cluster role.
D.
From Cluster1, configure the clustered File Server role of the File Server for scale-out
application data type.
Explanation:
* After the virtual machines are connected to the storage system using the virtual Fibre
Channel components shared storage can be used by each VM, which enables Hyper-V
guest clustering. Before the virtual Fibre Channel features were available, Hyper-V guest
machines were limited to iSCSI connections to enable shared storage for guest clustering.
* A new feature in Windows Server 2012 Hyper-V is the ability to create a virtual Fibre
Channel SAN. Each guest VM created on Windows Server 2012 includes a new option Add
hardware Fibre Channel cards, which can be attributed to World Wide node names (WWNN)
and select the virtual combine Virtual SAN Fibre Channel adapters.