Your network contains two Active Directory forests named contoso.com and adatum.com. Each forest contains one domain. A two-way forest trust exists between
the forests.
The forests use the address spaces shown in the following table.
From a computer in the contoso.com domain, you can perform reverse lookups for the servers in the contoso.com domain, but you cannot perform reverse lookups
for the servers in the adatum.com domain.
From a computer in the adatum.com domain, you can perform reverse lookups for the servers in both domains.
You need to ensure that you can perform reverse lookups for the servers in the adatum.com domain from the computers in the contoso.com domain.
What should you create?
A.
A trust point
B.
A GlobalNames zone
C.
A delegation
D.
A conditional forwarder
Explanation:
Conditional forwarders are DNS servers that only forward queries for specific domain names. Instead of forwarding all queries it cannot resolve locally to a
forwarder, a conditional forwarder is configured to forward a query to specific forwarders based on the domain name contained in the query. Forwarding according
to domain names improves conventional forwarding by adding a name-based condition to the forwarding process.
The conditional forwarder setting for a DNS server consists of the following:
The domain names for which the DNS server will forward queries.
One or more DNS server IP addresses for each domain name specified.
When a DNS client or server performs a query operation against a DNS server, the DNS server looks to see if the query can be resolved using its own zone data or
the data stored in its cache. If the DNS server is configured to forward for the domain name designated in the query, then the query is forwarded to the IP address
of a forwarder associated with the domain name. For example, in the following figure, each of the queries for the domain names is forwarded to a DNS server
associated with the domain name.
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc757172(v=ws.10).aspx