Your network contains an Active Directory domain named contoso.com.
The domain contains a Microsoft System Center 2012 infrastructure.
You deploy a service named Service1 by using a service template.
Service1 contains two virtual machines.
The virtual machines are configured as shown in the following table.
You need to recommend a monitoring solution to ensure that an administrator can review the availability information of Service1.
Solution: From Operations Manager, you create a Distributed Application and a Monitor Override.
Does this meet the goal?
A.
Yes
B.
No
Explanation:
Need to Check.
Could be Yes
This is correct. What would make it YES would be: You configure a Distributed Application and a Service Level Tracking Object.
That is, B: No
Your network contains an Active Directory domain named contoso.com. The domain contains a Microsoft System Center 2012 infrastructure. You deploy a service named Service1 by using a service template. Service1 contains two virtual machines. The virtual machines are configured as shown in the following table.
You need to recommend a monitoring solution to ensure that an administrator can review the availability information of Service1.
Solution:
A.
From Configuration Manager, create a Collection and a Desired Configuration Management baseline.
B. From Virtual Machine Manager (VMM), modify the properties of the service template.
C.
From Operations Manager, create a Distributed Application and a Monitor Override.
D.
From Operations Manager, create a Distributed Application and a Service Level Tracking object.
Answer D:
To add to No’s point, the answer is No, it doesn’t meet the goal. Overrides are meant to control the amount of data that flows in and out of SCOM, and also to reduce false positives. The override basically says, set up everything and just ignore it in this case.
To someone who doesn’t know SCOM, this is an easy one to miss.
And what is all this SCOM, SCSM, and System Center doing on a server exam anyway? 🙂
Answer is no:
Define a service level objective for an application
You can define a service level objective (SLO) to establish the availability and performance goals for an application. In the following procedure, you create a service level objective against a distributed application, define a monitor SLO that is based on availability (99.9% up-time), and define a collection rule SLO that is based on a performance rule (80% average processor time).
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/system-center/scom/manage-monitor-sla-overview