Passed Microsoft 70-341 Exam with Pass4sure and Lead2pass PDF & VCE (1-10)

Passed Microsoft 70-341 Exam with Pass4sure and Lead2pass PDF & VCE (1-10)

QUESTION 1
You have an Exchange Server 2013 organization. You create two distribution groups named Group1 and Group2. Group1 and Group2 each contain several hundred users. Group1 contains a user named User1. You need to configure moderation for Group2. The solution must meet the following requirements:
Email sent from the members of Group1 must NOT be moderated unless the sender is User1. All other email must be moderated by a user named Admin1. Which two actions should you perform? (Each correct answer presents part of the solution. Choose two.)

A.    Create a transport rule that has the conditions of the sender is User1 and the recipient is Group2.
Configure the transport rule to have an action of Forward the message for approval to Admin1.
B.    Create a transport rule that has the conditions of the sender is User1 and the recipient is Group2.
Configure the transport rule to have an action of Forward the message for approval to Admin1.
C.    Create a transport rule that has a condition of the recipient is Group2. Configure the transport rule to
have an action of Forward the message for approval to Admin1.
D.    Run Set-DistributionGroup Group2 – Moderated By Admin1 – BypassModerationFromSendersOrMembers
Group1 – ModerationEnabled $true.

Answer: BC
Explanation:
Moderated Transport
You can require all messages sent to specific recipients be approved by moderators by Using the moderated transport feature in Microsoft Exchange Server 2013. You can configure any type of recipient as a moderated recipient, and Exchange will ensure that all messages sent to those recipients go through an approval process. In any type of organization, you may need to restrict access to specific recipients. The most common scenario is the need to control messages sent to large distribution groups. Depending on your organization’s requirements, you may also need to control the messages sent to executive mailboxes or partner contacts. You can use moderated recipients to accomplish these tasks.
Transport Rules
Using Transport rules, you can look for specific conditions in messages that pass through your organization and take action on them.
Transport rules let you apply messaging policies to email messages, secure messages, protect messaging systems, and prevent information leakage.
Many organizations today are required by law, regulatory requirements, or company policies to apply messaging policies that limit the interaction between recipients and senders, both inside and outside the organization. In addition to limiting interactions among individuals, departmental groups inside the organization, and entities outside the organization, some organizations are also subject to the following messaging policy requirements:
Preventing inappropriate content from entering or leaving the organization Filtering confidential organization information
Tracking or archiving copying messages that are sent to or received from specific individuals Redirecting inbound and outbound messages for inspection before delivery Applying disclaimers to messages as they pass through the organization As messages go through the Transport pipeline, the Transport rules agent is invoked. The Transport rules agent is a special Transport agent that processes the Transport rules you create. The Transport rules agent scans the message, and if the message fits the conditions you specify in a Transport rule, it takes the specified action on that message.
NOT A
This means that all email sent to Group2 will be moderated.
NOT D
Unknown option
B
When you configure a recipient for moderation, all messages sent to that recipient are subject to approval by the designated moderators.
Allow the members of the distribution group named Group1 to bypass moderation. Combination of this rule and option C allows for only User1 to be affected by the moderator Admin1 C
Need to create a transport rule that identifies User1.

QUESTION 2
You have an Exchange Server 2013 organization that contains one server named exl.contoso.com. The server has the Mailbox server role and the Client Access server role installed. You plan to configure users to work from home and to access their email by using the Outlook Anywhere feature. Upon testing the planned configuration, you discover that the users can connect and synchronize email from home, but they cannot execute the following tasks:
– Set automatic replies for Out of Office.
– Download changes to the offline address book.
– View availability data when scheduling meetings with coworkers.
The users can execute these tasks when they work from the office.
You need to ensure that the users can execute the tasks when they work from home. Which two actions should you perform? (Each correct answer presents part of the solution. Choose two.)

A.    Install a new certificate on exl.contoso.com
B.    Modify the EWS virtual directory.
C.    Create a new Autodiscover virtual directory.
D.    Renew the certificate on exl.contoso.com.
E.    Modify the OAB virtual directory.

Answer: BE
Explanation:
NOT  A  D
Not related to a certificate issue
NOT  C
You may create a new Autodiscover site  if your organization has multiple e-mail domains and each requires its own Autodiscover site and corresponding virtual directory, use the New-AutodiscoverVirtualDirectory cmdlet to create a new Autodiscover virtual directory under a new Web site.
Not required in this scenario.
If you were going to create a new Autodiscover site then you would have to delete the old one first.
B
Need to modify the EWS virtual directory in order to create the external URL.

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E
Need to modify the OAB virtual directory to create the External URL

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QUESTION 3
Drag and Drop Question
Your network contains an Active Directory forest. The forest contains a single domain named fabrikam.com. You have an Exchange Server organization that contains four servers. The servers are configured as shown in the following table.

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You plan to enable Outlook Anywhere for all users. You plan to configure the users to connect to the name oa.fabrikam.com. The IP address of oa.fabrikam.com points to EX3. You need to ensure that users on EX2 and EX4 can access their mailbox by using Outlook Anywhere, Which command should you run on EX1 and EX3? (To answer, drag the appropriate cmdlets to the correct servers. Each cmdlet may be used once, more than once, or not at all. You may need to drag the split bar between panes or scroll to view content.)

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Answer:

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QUESTION 4
You have an Exchange Server 2013 organization named adatum.com. The organization contains two servers named EX1 and EX2 that are configured as shown in the table.

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Both servers are members of a database availability group (DAG). EX1 has the active copy of a database named Database1. Several users who have mailboxes in Database1 discover that all of their outbound email messages remain in their Drafts folder when they use Outlook Web App. You need to ensure that the email messages are delivered. What should you do?

A.    On EX2, retry the message queues.
B.    On EX1, start the Microsoft Exchange Mailbox Transport Submission service.
C.    On EX2, start the Microsoft Exchange Mailbox Transport Submission service.
D.    On EX1, retry the message queues.

Answer: B
Explanation:
In Microsoft Exchange Server 2013, mail flow occurs through the transport pipeline. The transport pipeline is a collection of services, connections, components, and queues that work together to route all messages to the categorizer in the Transport service on a Mailbox server inside the organization.

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The Transport service on a Mailbox server
Every message that’s sent or received in an Exchange 2013 organization must be categorized in the Transport service on a Mailbox server before it can be routed and delivered. After a message has been categorized, it’s put in a delivery queue for delivery to the destination mailbox database, the destination database availability group (DAG), Active Directory site, or Active Directory forest, or to the destination domain outside the organization.
The Transport service on a Mailbox server consists of the following components and processes:
SMTP Receive When messages are received by the Transport service, message content inspection is performed, transport rules are applied, and anti-spam and anti-malware inspection is performed if they are enabled. The SMTP session has a series of events that work together in a specific order to validate the contents of a message before it’s accepted. After a message has passed completely through SMTP Receive and isn’t rejected by receive events, or by an anti-spam and anti-malware agent, it’s put in the Submission queue.
Submission Submission is the process of putting messages into the Submission queue. The categorizer picks up one message at a time for categorization. Submission happens in three ways:
Through an SMTP Receive connector.
Through the Pickup directory or the Replay directory. These directories exist on the Mailbox server. Correctly formatted message files that are copied into the Pickup directory or the Replay directory are put directly into the Submission queue.
Through a transport agent.
Categorizer The categorizer picks up one message at a time from the Submission queue. The categorizer completes the following steps:
Recipient resolution, which includes top-level addressing, expansion, and bifurcation.
Routing resolution.
Content conversion.
Additionally, mail flow rules that are defined by the organization are applied. After messages have been categorized, they’re put into a delivery queue that’s based on the destination of the message. Messages are queued by the destination mailbox database, DAG, Active Directory site, Active Directory forest or external domain.
SMTP Send How messages are routed from the Transport service depends on the location of the message recipients relative to the Mailbox server where categorization occurred. The message could be routed to the Mailbox Transport service on the same Mailbox server, the Mailbox Transport service on a different Mailbox server that’s part of the same DAG, the Transport service on a Mailbox server in a different DAG, Active Directory site, or Active Directory forest, or to the Front End Transport service on a Client Access server for delivery to the Internet.
Retry a Message Queue
When a transport server can’t connect to the next hop, the delivery queue is put in a status of Retry. When you retry a delivery queue by using Queue Viewer or the Shell, you force an immediate connection attempt and override the next scheduled retry time. If the connection isn’t successful, the retry interval timer is reset. The delivery queue must be in a status of
Retry for this action to have any effect.
Use Queue Viewer in the Exchange Toolbox to retry a queue Click Start > All Programs > Microsoft Exchange 2013 > Exchange Toolbox.
In the Mail flow tools section, double-click Queue Viewer to open the tool in a new window. In Queue Viewer, click the Queues tab. A list of all queues on the server to which you’re connected is displayed.
Click Create Filter, and enter your filter expression as follows:
Select Status from the queue property drop-down list.
Select Equals from the comparison operator drop-down list.
Select Retry from the value drop-down list.
Click Apply Filter. All queues that currently have a Retry status are displayed. Select one or more queues from the list. Right-click, and then select Retry Queue. If the connection attempt is successful, the queue status changes to Active. If no connection can be made, the queue remains in a status of Retry and the next retry time is updated.
Resubmit messages in queues
Resubmitting a queue is similar to retrying a queue, except the messages are sent back to the Submission queue for the categorizer to reprocess. You can resubmit messages that have the following status:
Delivery queues that have the status of Retry. The messages in the queues can’t be in the Suspended state.
Messages in the Unreachable queue that aren’t in the Suspended state.
Messages in the poison message queue.
OWA DRAFTS FOLDER
http://thoughtsofanidlemind.wordpress.com/2013/03/25/exchange-2013-dns-stuck-messages/ OWA clients automatically capture copies of messages as they are being composed and store them in the Drafts folder. When the user issues a sent command, the Mailbox submit agent (running within the Store driver) takes over and processes the outbound message by giving it to either the Transport service running on the same mailbox server or to the Transport server running on another mailbox server. The connection is made via SMTP.
Messages stay in the Drafts folder until they are successfully sent by being processed by the transport service.
At this point, items are moved into the Sent Items folder. OWA 2013 behaves in the same way as OWA 2010 -nothing has changed in the way that messages are held in the Drafts folder until dispatch. What might account for user descriptions of items being "stuck" is when a problem occurs somewhere in the transport pipeline that prevents outbound messages being processed. For instance, items will remain in the Drafts folder if the Store cannot pass them to the transport system. If the transport service is not running on any available server or the mailbox transport service is not running on the mailbox server that hosts the active database for the user’s mailbox, items will stay in the Drafts folder until the services come online and Exchange is able to process outbound items.
NOT A C
Active copy of a database named Database1 (EX1) not on EX2 NOT D
Messages stay in the Drafts folder until they are successfully sent by being processed by the transport service
B
Resubmitting a queue is similar to retrying a queue, except the messages are sent back to the Submission queue for the categorizer to reprocess.
Messages stay in the Drafts folder until they are successfully sent by being processed by the transport service If the transport service is not running on any available server or the mailbox transport service is not running on the mailbox server that hosts the active database for the user’s mailbox, items will stay in the Drafts folder until the services come online and Exchange is able to process outbound items.

QUESTION 5
Hotspot Question
You have an Exchange Server 2013 organization that contains three servers. The servers are configured as shown in the following table.

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All of the servers are part of a database availability group (DAG) named DAG1. The databases are configured as shown in the following table.

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All of the databases replicate between all the members of DAG1. You plan to move all mailboxes from DB1 to DB2. You need to ensure that the passive copies of DB1 are in a healthy state before you move the mailboxes. Which command should you run? (To answer, select the appropriate options in the dialog box in the answer area.)

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Answer:

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Explanation:
SECTION1
NOT Set-MailboxServer
Use the Set-MailboxServer cmdlet to modify attributes on a computer running Microsoft Exchange with the
Mailbox server role installed.
Not required in this scenario.
Set-MailboxDatabase
Use the Set-MailboxDatabase cmdlet to configure a variety of properties for a mailbox database.
EXAMPLE 1
This example sets the length of time that deleted items are retained. If a specific mailbox has its own item retention set, that value is used instead of this value, which is set on the mailbox database. Set-MailboxDatabase "Mailbox Database01" -DeletedItemRetention 7.00:00:00 NOT Set-MailboxDatabaseCopy
Use the Set-MailboxDatabaseCopy cmdlet to configure the properties of a database copy.
EXAMPLE 1
This example configures the replay lag time with a value of 3 days for a copy of the database DB2 hosted on the Mailbox server MBX1.
Set-MailboxDatabaseCopy -Identity DB2\MBX1 -ReplayLagTime 3.0:0:0 EXAMPLE 2
This example configures an activation preference of 3 for the copy of the database DB1 hosted on the Mailbox server MBX2.
Set-MailboxDatabaseCopy -Identity DB1\MBX2 -ActivationPreference 3 NOT Set-DatabaseAvailabilityGroup
Use the Set-DatabaseAvailabilityGroup cmdlet to configure some of the properties of a database availability group (DAG). The Set-DatabaseAvailabilityGroup cmdlet enables you to manage DAG properties that can’t be managed from the Exchange Management Console, such as enabling and disabling cross-site RPC client access, configuring network discovery, selecting the TCP port used for replication, and enabling datacenter activation coordination (DAC) mode.
SECTION2
Need to identify the name of the mailbox database. (DB1) SECTION3
The DataMoveReplicationConstraint parameter specifies the throttling behavior for high availability mailbox moves. The possible values include:
None Moves shouldn’t be throttled to ensure high availability. Use this setting if the database isn’t part of a database availability group (DAG).
SecondCopy At least one passive mailbox database copy must have the most recent changes synchronized.
This is the default value. Use this setting to indicate that the database is replicated to one or more mailbox database copies.
SecondDatacenter At least one passive mailbox database copy in another Active Directory site must have the most recent changes replicated. Use this setting to indicate that the database is replicated to database copies in multiple Active Directory sites. AllDatacenters At least one passive mailbox database copy in each Active Directory site must have the most recent changes replicated. Use this setting to indicate that the database is replicated to database copies in multiple Active Directory sites.
AllCopies All copies of the database must have the most recent changes replicated. Use this setting to indicate that the database is replicated to one or more mailbox database copies. The database is replicated to database copies in multiple Active Directory sites so eliminate SecondCopy.
Unsure of why -AllDatacenters is the final choice but there are 3 Active Directory sites in this scenario.

QUESTION 6
Drag and Drop Question
Your network contains an internal network and a perimeter network. You have an Exchange Server 2010 organization that contains an Edge Transport server named EX3. You plan to upgrade the organization to Exchange Server 2013. You plan to replace EX3 and its functionalities with a new server named EX6 that has Exchange Server 2013 installed. EX6 will be used to send all email messages to and receive all email messages from the Internet and to filter spam. You need to recommend which steps are required to install EX6. EX6 must have the least number of Exchange Server roles installed. Which three actions should you recommend performing on EX6 in sequence?
(To answer, move the appropriate three actions from the list of actions to the answer area and arrange them in the correct order.)

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Answer:

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Explanation:
Run the following command to install the Anti-Spame Agents &
$env:ExchangeInstallPath\Scripts\Install-AntiSpamAgents.ps1
Run the Restart-Service
MSExchange Transport command
Need to run this command
Once the Install-AntiSpamAgents.ps1 script has run, if the anti-spam agents were successfully installed then exchange will ask you to restart the Microsoft Exchange Transport service. Use the Restart-Service MSExchange Transport command to do this.
Run the Update-MalwareFilteringServer.ps1 script.
Malware not mentioned in this scenario. No need to run. In order to retrieve a Microsoft engine update when you did not enable the antimalware feature on install or had it enabled but subsequently disabled it via the "Disable-AntimalwareScanning.ps1" script you will need to execute the script below which will initiate a Microsoft engine update:
Update-MalwareFilteringServer.ps1 -identity %ServerName% Answer Options
Install the Client Access server role or the Mailbox server role first EX6 will be used to send all email messages to and receive all email messages from the Internet and to filter spam.
An organization must have at least one Mailbox role and at least one Client Access server role installed.
CAS Exchange role does 3 things and only those things:
1. The CAS authenticates the connection made by the user so that it can determine who is trying to connect.
2. Once authenticated it will locate the user’s mailbox and find out on which mailbox server that mailbox is currently active
3. It then proxies the connection from that user to his or hers mailbox on the mailbox server and maintains that connection or redirects it to the appropriate CAS server.
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb124778(v=exchg.150).aspx
Each organization requires at a minimum one Client Access server and one Mailbox server in the Active Directory forest. Additionally, each Active Directory site that contains a Mailbox server must also contain at least one Client Access server.
If you’re separating your server roles, we recommend installing the Mailbox server role first. In the context of the question given that we have only 3 choices and the anti-spam installation will take up 2 of these choices , the Client Access Server is the server that sends all messages to and from the internet, therefore we need to install a Client Access server Then Install-AntiSpamAgents.ps1 as the anti-spam agents are required in this scenario Then run the Restart-Service MSExchange Transport command as required after the install-AntiSpamAgents.ps1 has been run

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Case Study 1: Contoso Ltd (QUESTION 7 ~ QUESTION 14)
Overview
General Overview
Contoso, Ltd., is a scientific research and supply company that has offices along the east coast of North America. The company recently completed an upgrade to Exchange Server 2013.
Physical Locations
The company has three sales offices and a research office. The sales offices are located in Atlanta, New York, and Montreal. The research office is located in Miami.
Existing Environment
Active Directory Environment
The network contains one Active Directory forest named contoso.com. The Miami office has its own domain named research.contoso.com. Each office is configured as an Active Directory site. Each site contains two domain controllers that run Windows Server 2008 R2 x64. All of the FSMO roles for contoso.com are owned by a domain controller in the New York site. All of the FSMO roles for the research.contoso.com domain are owned by a domain controller in the Miami site. One domain controller in each site is configured as a global catalog server. All of the domain controllers are configured as DNS servers. The functional level of the forest and domains is Windows Server 2008 R2.
Network Infrastructure
All client computers are configured to connect to the DNS servers in their respective office only. Contoso.com has a standalone certification authority (CA) on a server that runs Windows Server 2008 R2. All offices connect to the New York office by using a high-speed WAN link.
Email Infrastructure
The Exchange Server 2013 organization contains four servers in the New York office. The servers are configured as shown in the following table.

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All external access for the contoso.com organization is provided through an Internet link at the New York office. Load balancing is provided by using DNS round robin. All inbound and outbound email for the domain is routed through a mail appliance in the New York office.
The Exchange Server 2013 organization contains four servers in the Atlanta office. The servers are configured as shown in the following table.

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The file share witness for NY-DAG is on a file server in the Atlanta office. The Exchange Server 2013 organization contains two servers in the Montreal office and two servers in the Miami office. The servers are configured as shown the following table.

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All external access to the organization of the research.contoso.com domain is provided through the Internet link at the Miami office. Load balancing is provided by using DNS round robin. All inbound and outbound email for the domain goes through an email appliance in the Miami office. All Exchange Server 2013 servers run Windows Server 2012 Standard. All users have Windows Phone devices that connect to the Exchange organization by using Exchange ActiveSync.
User Issues
You discover the following user issues:
– Some users report that, intermittently, they fail to connect to their email from their Windows Phone device.
– Some users from the New York office report that some searches from Outlook Web App return incomplete results.
– Some of the users in each office report that they fail to access their mailbox during the maintenance period of the Active Directory domain controllers.
You verify that all of the remote users can connect to the network successfully by using a VPN connection, and can then launch Outlook successfully.
Partnerships
Contoso recently entered into a partnership with a company named A. Datum Corporation. A. Datum has a main office and four branch offices. The main office is located in Toronto. A. Datum has a messaging infrastructure configured as shown in the following table.

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Requirements
Planned Changes
Contoso plans to deploy a hardware load balancer in the New York office. The load balancer must bridge all SSL connections to the Exchange servers. You plan to deploy two new Exchange Server 2013 servers in a virtual server environment in the Miami office. The servers will host a few mailboxes as part of an evaluation of resource utilization for virtualized Exchange servers. You also plan to deploy a high availability solution for Mailbox servers in the You plan to replace the email appliance in New York because of recent power outages.
Business Requirements
Contoso identifies the following business requirements:
– Minimize the hardware costs required for a load balancing solution.
– Minimize the software costs required for a load balancing solution.
– Minimize user interruptions if a service fails on a Mailbox server.
– Minimize user interruptions if a service fails on a Client Access server.

QUESTION 7
You need to identify which business requirement will be met by implementing the planned hardware load balancer. Which business requirement should you identify?

A.    Minimize the hardware costs required for a load balancing solution.
B.    Minimize the software costs required for a load balancing solution.
C.    Minimize user interruptions if a service fails on a Client Access server.
D.    Minimize user interruptions if a service fails on a Mailbox server.

Answer: C
Explanation:
NOT A
Introducing a load balancing solution will not minimize hardware costs
NOT B
Introducing a hardware load balancing solution will not minimize software costs
NOT D
A hardware load balancer connects to the Client Access servers not the Mailbox servers.
C
A hardware load balancer connects to the Client Access servers not the Mailbox servers AND is designed to minimize user interruptions

QUESTION 8
You need to resolve the search issue reported by the users in the New York office. You restart the Microsoft Exchange Search service and discover that the active copy of the mailbox database has a content indexing status of Unknown. What should you do next?

A.    Rebuild the content index.
B.    Run the Update-MailboxDatabaseCopy cmdlet and specify the -manualresume parameter.
C.    Restart the Microsoft Exchange Mailbox Replication service.
D.    Run the Update-MailboxDatabaseCopy cmdlet and specify the -catalogonly parameter.

Answer: A
Explanation:
A
One of the first actions most Exchange Administrators generally take when troubleshooting suspected problems with Exchange Content Indexing will be to rebuild the impacted Mailbox Database’s content index files (either manually or by using the ResetSearchIndex.ps1 script found in the \Exchange Server\Scripts directory).
Makes sure that Exchange content index always remain healthy.
NOT B
Not a database replication issue
If the content index catalog for a mailbox database copy gets corrupted, you may need to reseed the catalog.
Seeding is also known as updating.
Use the Update-MailboxDatabaseCopy cmdlet to seed or reseed a mailbox database copy.
EXAMPLE 1
This example seeds a copy of the database DB1 on the Mailbox server MBX1.
Update-MailboxDatabaseCopy -Identity DB1\MBX1
The ManualResume switch specifies whether to automatically resume replication on the database copy. With this parameter, you can manually resume replication to the database copy.
NOT C
Not related to an indexing issue.
In Exchange 2013, the Microsoft Exchange Replication service periodically monitors the health of all mounted databases. In addition, it also monitors the Extensible Storage Engine (ESE) for any I/O errors or failures. When the service detects a failure, it notifies Active Manager. Active Manager then determines which database copy should be mounted and what it requires to mount that database. In addition, it tracks the active copy of a mailbox database (based on the last mounted copy of the database) and provides the tracking results information to the Client Access server to which the client is connected.
NOT D
Content index needs to be rebuilt
If the content index catalog for a mailbox database copy gets corrupted, you may need to reseed the catalog.
Seeding is also known as updating.
Use the Update-MailboxDatabaseCopy cmdlet to seed or reseed a mailbox database copy.
EXAMPLE 1
This example seeds a copy of the database DB1 on the Mailbox server MBX1.
Update-MailboxDatabaseCopy -Identity DB1\MBX1
The CatalogOnly parameter specifies that only the content index catalog for the database copy should be seeded.

QUESTION 9
You need to ensure that all of the email messages sent from the Internet to adatum.com are routed through the contoso.com organization. What should you create in contoso.com? (Each corrects answer presents part of the solution. Choose all that apply.)

A.    a contact object for each adatum.com recipient
B.    an internal relay accepted domain for adatum.com
C.    a Send connector that is configured to point to the contoso.com transport servers
D.    a Send connector that is configured to point to the adatum.com transport servers
E.    an authoritative accepted domain for adatum.com

Answer: BD
Explanation:
B
An accepted domain is any SMTP namespace for which a Microsoft Exchange Server 2013 organization sends or receives email.
Accepted domains include those domains for which the Exchange organization is authoritative. An Exchange organization is authoritative when it handles mail delivery for recipients in the accepted domain.
Accepted domains also include domains for which the Exchange organization receives mail and then relays it to an email server that’s outside the organization for delivery to the recipient.
D
2nd part of establishing an internal relay domain is to establish a Send Connector that is configured to point to the other organization’s mail servers (a datum)
NOT A
Better to establish an internal relay domain.
A mail-enabled Active Directory contact that contains information about people or organizations that exist outside the Exchange organization. Each mail contact has an external email address. All messages sent to the mail contact are routed to this external email address.
NOT C
Need to establish a Send connector to  adatum.com  not  contoso.com
NOT E
Need to establish an internal relay domain not an authorative accepted domain for adatum.com

QUESTION 10
You need to prevent several users in the Miami office from establishing more than two concurrent Exchange ActiveSync connections to the Exchange Server organization. The solution must affect only the users in the Miami office. Which two actions should you perform? (Each correct answer presents part of the solution. Choose two.)

A.    Create a new throttling policy that has the Organization scope.
B.    Create a new throttling policy that has the Global scope.
C.    Create a new throttling policy that has the Regular scope.
D.    Run the Set-ThrottlingPolicyAssociation cmdlet.
E.    Run the Set-ThrottlingPolicy cmdlet.
F.    Remove the default throttling policy.

Answer: CD
Explanation:
C
Need to establish a New Throttling policy to limit the Exchange ActiveSync connections and that has a regular scope to associate with specific users.
D
Use the Set-ThrottlingPolicyAssociation cmdlet to associate a throttling policy with a specific object. The object can be a user with a mailbox, a user without a mailbox, a contact, or a computer account.
EXAMPLE 1
This example associates a user with a user name of tonysmith to the throttling policy ITStaffPolicy that has higher limits.
Set-ThrottlingPolicyAssociation -Identity tonysmith -ThrottlingPolicy ITStaffPolicy
NOT A
Need a regular scope
NOT B
Need a regular scope
NOT E
Need to associate the new thottling policy with respective users.
Use the Set-ThrottlingPolicy cmdlet to modify the settings for a user throttling policy.
EXAMPLE 1
This example modifies a throttling policy so that users associated with this policy can have a maximum of four concurrent requests running in Exchange Web Services.
$a = Get-ThrottlingPolicy RemoteSiteUserPolicy
$a | Set-ThrottlingPolicy -EwsMaxConcurrency 4
NOT F
Need to create a new throttling policy

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