Information Technology Reference
In-Depth Information
Objective review
User1 has been on vacation for a week, with his laptop turned off. When he attempted
to connect via modem to the Remote Access dial-in bank on day four of the vacation, his
dial-in attempt was rejected. However, when he returns home three days later, he initially
has a problem when he logs on to his laptop and attempts to connect to the network
remotely. When he returns to the office, all is well, although his initial logon seems rather
slow. When he goes home that night, he is again able to connect to the network. User1 is
authorized for dial-up, and NAP policies are in place for both internal network connec-
tions and remote connections. What was a possible cause of the problem?
A. The connection request policy for dial-up connections has a condition on the
Called Station ID that limits callers to the local area code.
B. The health policy for dial-up and VPN access requires that all client SHV checks
must pass.
C. The health policy for internal network access requires that all client SHV checks
must pass.
1.
The network connection policy for dial-up connections is set to enable access.
D.
2. What configuration changes do you need to make on client computers to support
NAP?
A. Set the Network Access Protection Agent to Automatic.
B. Enable the DHCP Quarantine Enforcement Agent.
C. Enable the EAP Quarantine Enforcement Agent.
D. Use Group Policy to set the Turn On Security Center (Domain PCs Only) policy to
Enabled.
A, B, D.
E.
B, C, D.
F.
All of the above.
G.
3. When you configure NPS for DHCP, you configure the network policy to enforce the
health policy. What settings do you need make in the network policy?
A. If the client SHV fails one or more SHV checks, deny access.
B. If the client SHV fails one or more SHV checks, grant access only for EAP clients.
C. If the client SHV passes one or more SHV checks, deny access.
D. If the client SHV passes one or more SHV checks, enable access.
 
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