Information Technology Reference
In-Depth Information
Objective summary
DirectAccess can be installed for remote access and remote management, or for
remote management only.
Windows 8 and later clients do not require certificates for DirectAccess.
To support Windows 7, DirectAccess must be configured with computer certificates.
DirectAccess can be installed with one or two network adapters, and can be installed
directly connected to the Internet, in a perimeter network, or behind a NAT device.
Client computers must be explicitly allowed to connect via DirectAccess.
DirectAccess is configured in four steps: Client, Server, Infrastructure Servers, and
Application Servers.
You can limit DirectAccess to mobile computers only.
All DirectAccess computers must be domain joined.
DirectAccess can be co-installed with VPN.
Objective review
You are the network administrator for TreyResearch.net. You have deployed
DirectAccess, and initial acceptance has been good, but now some users report that
they cannot connect to the corporate network since the rollout, but have used VPN as
a fallback. Other users report that they can connect via DirectAccess without problems.
Upon investigation, all users reporting that they cannot connect are on desktop com-
puters. What are the possible causes? (Choose all that apply.)
A. During initial setup, you configured DirectAccess with the Quick Start Wizard.
B. During initial setup, you configured DirectAccess with the Remote Access Setup
Wizard and cleared both the Use Force Tunneling and Enable DirectAccess for
Mobile Computers Only check boxes in the DirectAccess Client Setup Wizard.
C. During initial setup, you configured DirectAccess with the Remote Access
Setup Wizard, and added the Mobile Computers Security Group and the Home
Computers Security Group to the Enabled For DirectAccess field.
1.
All of the above.
D.
None of the above.
E.
 
 
 
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