Home > Archive > 70-218 > November 2002 > QoD - Mon 25 Nov





You are viewing an archived Text-only version of the thread. To view this thread in it's original format and/or if you want to reply to this thread please [click here]

Author QoD - Mon 25 Nov
ruscorp

2002-11-25, 12:15 pm

Topic: Permissions

Q.) Greg is an administrator who shares out a folder under the default permissions off a server using FAT32. No other changes have been made to the share permissions. Tim is not able to access the folder remotely. What are possible reasons this might be the case and what would be a possible solution?

A.) There might be a networking problem. Make sure Tim's system can access other folders, that he has valid TCP/IP settings, and that no one else is having problems accessing the folder.

B.) Tim does not have remote permission to access the folder. Go back into the permissions of the folder and establish permissions for either Tim or a group he belongs to.

C.) Tim does not have the proper local permissions. On the server, go into the security permissions for the folder and ensure permissions locally.

D.) The FAT32 file system doesn’t allow for sharing. Convert the file system to NTFS and then share the folder again.
jp_d55

2002-11-25, 12:59 pm

i think answer A would be the correct one.
RunnerNJ3

2002-11-25, 1:59 pm

I'll go along with "A".
Spid

2002-11-25, 2:23 pm

I agree with "A" as well.
namrak

2002-11-25, 2:37 pm

Answer (A). Tim should check out his network connection as he should have access to the particular folder under default permissions.
luisjo

2002-11-25, 5:13 pm

A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A
NetChild1985

2002-11-26, 12:12 am

A
sanjbatra

2002-11-26, 5:00 am

I agree with A

ruscorp

2002-11-26, 2:57 pm

quote:
Originally posted by ruscorp
Topic: Permissions

Q.) Greg is an administrator who shares out a folder under the default permissions off a server using FAT32. No other changes have been made to the share permissions. Tim is not able to access the folder remotely. What are possible reasons this might be the case and what would be a possible solution?

A.) There might be a networking problem. Make sure Tim's system can access other folders, that he has valid TCP/IP settings, and that no one else is having problems accessing the folder.

B.) Tim does not have remote permission to access the folder. Go back into the permissions of the folder and establish permissions for either Tim or a group he belongs to.

C.) Tim does not have the proper local permissions. On the server, go into the security permissions for the folder and ensure permissions locally.

D.) The FAT32 file system doesn’t allow for sharing. Convert the file system to NTFS and then share the folder again.



The answer is A.) Most likely, there is a problem with Tim’s system accessing the network. The default permission for a folder that is shared out is that "Everyone" gets Full Control. Immediately, if Tim can log on he should be able to access that folder. Answer b is incorrect because the default permissions are already good enough for access. Answer c is incorrect because FAT32 doesn’t allow for local permissions and so this shouldn’t hinder Tim from access. Answer d is incorrect because FAT32 does, in fact, allow remote sharing of folders and there is no need to convert to NTFS.
Sponsored Links





Free Braindumps | MCSE braindumps software forum

Copyright 2003 - 2008 examnotes.net