You have a shared folder named Share1. The folder permissions of Share1 are configured as shown in the
Folder Permissions exhibit.(Click the Exhibit button.)
The Share permissions of Share1 are configured as shown in the Share Permissions exhibit.
(Click the Exhibit button.)
You have a group named Group1. The members of Group1 are shown in the Group1 exhibit.
(Click the Exhibit button.)
Select Yes if the statement can be shown to be true based on the available information; otherwise select No.
Each correct selection is worth one point.
Hot Area:
NTFS permissions control access to the files and folders stored on disk volumes formatted with the NTFS file
system. Share permissions control access to folders over a network.
To access a file over a network, a user must have appropriate share permissions (and appropriate NTFS
permissions if the shared folder is on an NTFS volume).Granting a user Full
Control NTFS permission on a folder enables that user to take ownership of the folder unless the user is
restricted in some other way.User1 was not granted Full Control permission.
The Administrators have Full Control permission. I assume that User2 is an administrator since the Group1
exhibit shows only User1 as a member.http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc754178.aspx Exam Ref 70-410: Installing and configuring Windows
Server 2012 R2, Chapter 2: Configure server roles and features,
Objective 2.1: Configure file and share access, p.75-80
This applied the most restricted rule win.
User1 : Read and Write (Sharing) + Change (Folder) = Read and Write
User2 : Modify (Sharing) + Change (Folder) = Both have delete capabilities
Administrator : Modify (Sharing) + Fullcontrol (Folder) = Both have delete capabilities
The answer is:
– No
– No
– Yes
I already tested and found that BOTH User1 and User2 DO NOT have the right “Delete subfolders and files”, although both of them DO HAVE the right “Delete”.
I do not really understand the MAIN difference between “Delete subfolders and files” and “Delete”. Could anyone help to explain it, please ?
The answer is:
– No
– No
– Yes
I already tested and found that BOTH User1 and User2 DO NOT have the right “Delete subfolders and files”, although both of them DO HAVE the right “Delete”.
I do not really understand the MAIN difference between “Delete subfolders and files” and “Delete”. Could anyone help to explain it, please ?