You are a network administrator for a regional automotive club. The club accepts new memberships and also takes orders for merchandising. The club currently is running an online Web site at a third-party hosting company.
The club’s network consists of five Microsoft Windows XP Professional client computers. The network has a single server that runs Microsoft Windows Server 2000. The server hosts shared files and a single printer device. The users share the Internet through a router that is connected to a high-speed Digital Subscriber Lines (DSL) connection.
You need to move the organizations Web site from a third-party hosting service onto its own server.
What should you do? (Choose all that apply.)
A.
Install DHCP Server service on the Windows 2000 Server computer. Configure the DHCP scope options with appropriate Name Server.
B.
Install DNS Server service on the Windows 2000 Server computer. Configure DNS Forward Lookup Zones.
C.
Copy Web files into the directory on the server. Configure IIS to the new Web site directory.
D.
Configure the external DNS server to point Host (A) records to the company’s IP address.
E.
Forward port 80 on the router to point to the server.