Which three actions should you perform in sequence?

DRAG DROP
Your company has a private cloud that is managed by using a System Center 2012 infrastructure.
The private cloud contains 200 servers that run Windows Server 2008 R2. All of the servers are managed by
Operations Manager.
The private cloud contains an application named App1 that is deployed on-demand to several servers. The
servers that run the application are identified by a registry value set during the application’s installation.
You create a monitor that targets all of the servers.
You need to modify the monitor to only affect the servers that have the application installed.
Which three actions should you perform in sequence? (To answer, move the appropriate actions from the list of
actions to the answer area and arrange them in the correct order.)
Select and Place:

DRAG DROP
Your company has a private cloud that is managed by using a System Center 2012 infrastructure.
The private cloud contains 200 servers that run Windows Server 2008 R2. All of the servers are managed by
Operations Manager.
The private cloud contains an application named App1 that is deployed on-demand to several servers. The
servers that run the application are identified by a registry value set during the application’s installation.
You create a monitor that targets all of the servers.
You need to modify the monitor to only affect the servers that have the application installed.
Which three actions should you perform in sequence? (To answer, move the appropriate actions from the list of
actions to the answer area and arrange them in the correct order.)
Select and Place:

Answer:

Explanation:
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh212869.aspx

In Operations Manager 2007, you can create attributes to define a commonality within a group of objects that
you want to monitor.
After you create an attribute, you can create a group whose members are only objects that have the
commonality described in your attribute.For example, if you want to monitor a set of servers that all have a common registry value, you create an
attribute based on that registry value.
To find the servers that have that registry value, you create a group that has a dynamic inclusion rule for only
those servers that have the newly created attribute and target the group only to the server object type.
Operations Manager then checks the registry of each server to see whether that registry value exists.
If it does, that server is added as a member of the group.
When you create an attribute, you must select an object type as a target for it.
Operations Manager adds the new attribute to the existing list of attributes for that object type.
If the target you select is from a sealed management pack, the object type also is sealed and the new attribute
cannot be added.
Instead, Operations Manager creates a new object type to which it adds the new attribute.
By default, this new object type is named after the original object type with _Extended appended to the original
name.
This new object type contains all the attributes of the original object type, in addition to the attribute you are
creating.
You can view existing attributes in the Monitoring area of the Operations console.
If the attributes are defined within a sealed management pack, you can view the properties of the attribute but
you cannot change them.
The properties of an attribute include information about where the attribute information is stored, such as the
registry or through WMI.
You can create a new attribute for any monitored object, and you can change most of the properties of an
attribute that you create.
However, the Attribute Type property, which identifies the source of the attribute information such as the
registry, cannot be changed after an attribute is created.
http://systemscenter.ru/opsmgr2007.en/html/26d205e5- a26b-416e-93ae-9f33fe156311.htm



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