You support computers that run Windows 8 and are members of an Active Directory domain.
Recently, several domain user accounts have been configured with super-mandatory user profiles.
A user reports that she has lost all of her personal data after a computer restart. You need to
configure the user’s computer to prevent possible user data loss in the future. What should you do?
A.
Configure the user’s documents library to include folders from network shares.
B.
Remove the .man extension from the user profile name.
C.
Add the .dat extension to the user profile name.
D.
Configure Folder Redirection by using the domain group policy.
Explanation:
A mandatory user profile is a special type of pre-configured roaming user profile that administrators
can use to specify settings for users. With mandatory user profiles, a user can modify his or her
desktop, but the changes are not saved when the user logs off. The next time the user logs on, the
mandatory user profile created by the administrator is downloaded. There are two types of
mandatory profiles: normal mandatory profiles and super-mandatory profiles. User profiles become
mandatory profiles when the administrator renames the NTuser.dat file (the registry hive) on the
server to NTuser.man. The .man extension causes the user profile to be a read-only profile. User
profiles become super-mandatory when the folder name of the profile path ends in .man; for
example, \\\\server\\share\\mandatoryprofile.man\\. Super-mandatory user profiles are similar to
normal mandatory profiles, with the exception that users who have super-mandatory profiles cannot
log on when the server that stores the mandatory profile is unavailable. Users with normal
mandatory profiles can log on with the locally cached copy of the mandatory profile. Only system
administrators can make changes to mandatory user profiles.http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/bb776895(v=vs.85).aspx
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/hh868022.aspx