Тест №70-647: Pro: Windows Server 2008, Enterprise Administrator
Продолжительность:
Языки теста: English
Online тест:
Кол-во вопросов:
Мин.проходной балл:
Темы:
Audience Profile
The enterprise administrator is responsible for the overall IT
environment and architecture. The enterprise administrator
translates business goals into technology decisions and designs
mid-range to long-term strategies. Enterprise administrators also
make key decisions and recommendations about the following:
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Network infrastructure
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Directory services, identity management, and authentication
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Security policies
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Business continuity (disaster recovery, personnel, equipment,
and data)
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Design of IT administrative structure (delegation models)
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Best practices, standards, and service level agreements (SLAs)
The enterprise administrator is responsible for infrastructure
design and global configuration changes. The enterprise
administrator's job role involves 20 percent operations, 60 percent
engineering, and 20 percent support tasks.
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Credit Toward CertificationExam
70-647: Pro: Windows Server 2008, Enterprise Administrator: counts as
credit toward the following certification(s):
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Note This
preparation guide is subject to change at any time without prior notice
and at the sole discretion of Microsoft. Microsoft exams might include
adaptive testing technology and simulation items. Microsoft does not
identify the format in which exams are presented. Please use this
preparation guide to prepare for the exam, regardless of its format. |
Skills Being MeasuredThis
exam measures your ability to accomplish the technical tasks listed
below.The
percentages indicate the relative weight of each major topic area on the
exam. |
Planning network and application services (23 percent)
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Plan for name resolution and IP addressing. May include but is
not limited to: internal and external naming strategy, naming
resolution support for legacy clients, naming resolution for
directory services, IP addressing scheme, TCP/IP version
coexistence
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Design for network access. May include but is not limited to:
network access policies, remote access strategy, perimeter
networks, server and domain isolation
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Plan for application delivery. May include but is not limited
to: application virtualization, presentation virtualization,
locally installed software, Web-based applications
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Plan for Terminal Services. May include but is not limited to:
Terminal Services licensing, Terminal Services infrastructure
Designing core identity and access management components (25 percent)
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Design Active Directory forests and domains. May include but is
not limited to: forest structure, forest and domain functional
levels, intra-organizational authorization and authentication,
schema modifications
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Design the Active Directory physical topology. May include but
is not limited to: placement of servers, site and replication
topology, printer location policies
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Design the Active Directory administrative model. May include
but is not limited to: delegation, group strategy, compliance
auditing, group administration, organizational structure
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Design the enterprise-level group policy strategy. May include
but is not limited to: group policy hierarchy and scope
filtering, control device installation, authentication and
authorization
Designing support identity and access management components (29 percent)
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Plan for domain or forest migration, upgrade, and restructuring.
May include but is not limited to: cross-forest authentication,
backward compatibility, object migration, migration planning,
implementation planning, environment preparation
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Design the branch office deployment. May include but is not
limited to: authentication strategy, server security
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Design and implement public key infrastructure. May include but
is not limited to: certificate services, PKI operations and
maintenance, certificate life cycle management
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Plan for interoperability. May include but is not limited to:
inter-organizational authorization and authentication,
application authentication interoperability, cross-platform
interoperability
Designing for business continuity and data availability (23 percent)
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Plan for business continuity. May include but is not limited to:
service availability, directory service recovery
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Design for software updates and compliance management. May
include but is not limited to: patch management and patch
management compliance, Microsoft Update and Windows Update,
security baselines, system health models
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Design the operating system virtualization strategy. May include
but is not limited to: server consolidation, application
compatibility, virtualization management, placement of servers
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Design for data management and data access. May include but is
not limited to: data security, data accessibility and
redundancy, data collaboration
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Preparation Tools and ResourcesTo
help you prepare for this exam, Microsoft Learning recommends that you
have hands-on experience with the product and that you use the following
training resources. These training resources do not necessarily cover
all of the topics listed in the "Skills Measured" tab. |
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MeasureUp(Measureup.com)
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Self Test Software(Selftestsoftware.com)
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Microsoft Online Resources
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TechNet: Designed for IT professionals, this site includes
how-to instructions, best practices, downloads, technical
resources, newsgroups, and chats.
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MSDN: Designed for developers, the Microsoft Developer
Network (MSDN) features code samples, technical articles,
downloads, newsgroups, and chats.
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Microsoft Learning Community: Join newsgroups and visit
community forums to connect with your peers for suggestions on
training resources and advice on your certification path and
studies.
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