A. Clone to Template
B. Add Permission
C. Rename
D. Convert to Virtual Machine
A, B, C and D. All of these options are listed in the context menus when right-clicking a template using the vSphere Web Client.
A. Virtual machine
B. vApp
C. Cluster
D. Resource pool
C and D. Neither a cluster nor a resource pool is a valid content type in vCloud Connector.
A. Create four virtual machines one at a time.
B. Create one virtual machine and clone it three times.
C. Create on virtual machine and then convert it to a template. Deploy the remaining VMs from this template.
D. Create a vApp.
B. Creating the VM and cloning it would be the least amount of work. Cloning can be used to avoid repetition of tasks.
A. Power off the virtual machine and add the options to the VM using the Configuration Parameters > Edit Configuration button in the virtual machine settings.
B. Add the options to the VM using the Security Parameters button in the virtual machine settings.
C. Power off the virtual machine and clone it. Specify these options as part of the cloning process.
D. Clone the virtual machine and specify these options as a part of the cloning process.
A. Advanced parameters are added in a virtual machine’s settings by clicking the VM Optionos toolbar item, and then navigating to Advanced> Configuration Parameters >Edit Configuration. These options can be configured only when the virtual machine is powered off.
A. Disable Acceleration
B. Limit
C. Shares
D. Reservation
A. The Disable Acceleration option is used to slow down a virtual machine if there is a problem running or installing software in the virtual machine.
A. Distributed Power Management (DPM)
B. Distributed Resource Scheduler (DRS)
C. Fault Tolerance (FT
D. vMotion
B and D. The Distributed Resource Scheduler and vMotion are both supported features that can be used with USB passthrough.
A. OVA
B. OVF
C. OVT
D. OVX
B. vApps are built on an industry-standard format known as the Open Virtualization Format (OVF).
A. Guest Operating System
B. Force BIOS Setup
C. CPUID Mask
D. Power Management
B. The option to force the virtual machine to enter the BIOS/EFI setup is one of the few options that may be configured while the virtual machine is powered on.
A. Using the Web Client, convert the template to a virtual machine, power on the virtual machine, make changes to the virtual machine as required, power off the virtual machine, and convert the virtual machine to a template.
B. Using the Web Client, power on the virtual machine template, make changes to the virtual machine as required, and power off the virtual machine template.
C. Using the Web Client, rename the virtual machine template using the File Browser, power on the virtual machine, make changes to the virtual machine as required, power off the virtual machine template, and rename the virtual machine using the File Browser.
D. Using the Web Client, convert the template to a virtual machine using VMware Converter, power on the virtual machine, make changes to the virtual machine as required, power off the virtual machine, and convert the virtual machine to a template.
A. Templates cannot be powered on; they must first be converted to virtual machines to be powered on. After converting a template to a VM, the VM can be updated as required, powered off, and then converted to a template again.
A. Use output file
B. Use physical serial port
C. Use named pipe
D. Use network
A, B, C and D. Use output file, use physical serial port, use named pipe, and use network are the four available options for a new serial port configuration.
A. Virtual machine configuration files
B. vMotion network(s)
C. vCenter Server permissions
D. ESXi hosts
A, B, C and D. Virtual machine security consists of securing the virtual machine, the ESXi host(s) it runs on, the storage and Ethernet networks it uses, the vCenter Server used to manage it, the backup server used to protect it, and likely more. Each environment will be different, but securing virtual machines encompasses a lot of different parts of the infrastructure.
A. Shares
B. Limits
C. Reservations
D. Allocations
A, B and C. Shares, limits, and reservations can all be specified in the Edit Resource Settings window for a virtual machine.
A. .vmx
B. .vmxf
C. .vmtx
D. .vmsd
C. When a virtual machine is converted to a template, its configuration file will have the .vmtx extension.
A. Add another virtual disk to the virtual machine and instruct the virtual machine owner to move some of her data to it.
B. Hot-extend the virtual disk in the Web Client and then extend the volume in Windows using the Disk Manager.
C. Instruct the user to schedule downtime and power down the virtual machine’s guest OS. Hot-extend the disk.
D. Clone the virtual machine and resize the disk.
B. Windows Server 2008 R2 supports extending OS volumes, and vSphere supports hot-extending disks. Neither of these procedures requires downtime to accomplish.
A. Specify a different boot firmware.
B. Specify a Boot Delay value.
C. Select the Force BIOS Setup option.
D. Set a Failed Boot Recovery value.
B and C. Setting a power-on delay will provide additional time to access the BIOS setup; even better is the Force BIOS Setup option, which will ensure that the virtual machine boots into the BIOS setup.
A. VSWP
B. LOG
C. VMX
D. VMDK
A and D. Virtual machine swap files (VSWP) and virtual disk files (VMDK) can be moved to locations outside of the virtual machine working location.
A. VMSS
B. VMSN
C. VSWP
D. VMSD
D. The VMSD file is a database that stores information and metadata about snapshots for a virtual machine.
A. vCenter Server
B. vSphere Client
C. vSphere Web Client
D. VMware Converter
A, B and C. The vSphere Client and Web Client can both be used to create and use clones and templates while connected to vCenter Server.
A. Windows guest OS and VMXNET
B. Linux guest OS and VMXNET2
C. Windows guest OS and VMXNET3
D. Linux guest OS and VMXNET 3
A and C. Windows as the guest OS is always a requirement for Wake On LAN, and both the VMXNET and VMXNET 3 virtual adapters are supported.
A. Virtual appliances
B. Virtual disks
C. vTeam
D. vApps
A and D. Virtual appliances and vApps can both be deployed by using the Deploy OVF Template function in the Web Client.