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Page 6 out of 28 Pages

You appended a site-specific Rights Profile to the /etc/security/prof_attr file.
Which file will be updated as a result of this operation?


A.

/etc/security/prof_attr.d/local-entries


B.

 /etc/security/prof_attr.d/prof_attr


C.

/etc/security/prof_attr.d/core-os


D.

/etc/user_attr






C.
  

/etc/security/prof_attr.d/core-os



Explanation: Example:
In Solaris 11 the “grant” authorization is no longer used, rather a set of authentication have
been defined for that
purpose. The authentication strings can be found in /etc/security/prof_attr.d/core-os file.
solaris.auth.:RO::Authorizations::help=AuthorizationHeader.html
solaris.auth.assign:RO::Assign any authorization::help=AuthAssign.html
solaris.auth.delegate:RO::Assign owned authorizations::help=AuthDelegate.html
solaris.auth.manage:RO::Manage authorizations::help=AuthManage.html
Note: You no longer need to use the visual editor to add your own site specific entries to
the Role Based Access Controls framework in Oracle Solaris 11. The profile command has
been modified to support creation, modification and removal of Rights Profiles

Which two commands restart the pkg server daemon?


A.

pkill -HUP pkg.depotd


B.

svcadm restart svc:/application/pkg/server


C.

  pkill -USR1 pkg.depot


D.

  svcadm refresh svc:/application/pkg/server


E.

pkg fix





B.
  

svcadm restart svc:/application/pkg/server



C.
  

  pkill -USR1 pkg.depot



Explanation: Use one of the following methods to restart the depot server process:
B: Use svcadm(1M) to restart the application/pkg/server instance.
C: Send a SIGUSR1 signal to the depot server process using kill(1). This executes a
“graceful restart” that leaves the process intact but reloads all configuration, package, and
search data:
# kill -USR1 pid
Note:
* The pkd.depotd service is managed by SMF under the service identifier
svc:/application/pkg/server.

You administer a server running a global zone with no virtual networking. Consider the
following configuration:


Which is a valid IPMP configuration for this server?


A.

net0 and net1 must be configured into an IPMP group, net2 can be configured into its
own IPMP group, and net0 or net1 can be configured as a standby interface.


B.

net0 and net1 must be configured into one IPMP group, net2 and net3 must be
configured into a second IPMP group, and all interfaces can be configured for link
detection.


C.

net1 and net2 must be configured into an IPMP group, net0 can be configured into its
own IPMP group, and net3 can be configured as a standby interface.


D.

net0 and net2 must be configured into an IPMP group, net0 can be configured into its
own IPMP group, and net3 can be configured as a standby interface.






A.
  

net0 and net1 must be configured into an IPMP group, net2 can be configured into its
own IPMP group, and net0 or net1 can be configured as a standby interface.



Explanation: Must be in the same network range (see * below).
Different speeds are fine (see ** below).

* An IP multipathing group, or IPMP group, consists of one or more physical interfaces on
the same system that are configured with the same IPMP group name. All interfaces in the
IPMP group must be connected to the same IP link (A, not B, not C, Not D).
** The same (non-null) character string IPMP group name identifies all interfaces in the
group. You can place interfaces from NICs of different speeds within the same IPMP group,
as long as the NICs are of the same type. For example, you can configure the interfaces of
100-megabit Ethernet NICs and the interfaces of one gigabit Ethernet NICs in the same
group. As another example, suppose you have two 100-megabit Ethernet NICs. You can
configure one of the interfaces down to 10 megabits and still place the two interfaces into
the same IPMP group.

Your company's security policy prohibits access to the Internet. You already installed an
instance of Oracle Solaris 11 on an M-series server for base testing. You used the text
install media to install the system. You also installed a package repository on the same
system.
There are 10 M-series servers that have just been installed on the local network.
Can you immediately install an AI server on your testing machine order to install Oracle
Solaris 11 on these 10 servers?


A.

Yes, by using the existing Solaris 10 Jumpstart server.


B.

Yes, by using the text install media for the AI software.


C.

Yes, by using the Installed package repository.


D.

  No, you must download the AI .iso image from Oracle first.


E.

No, the Solaris large-server group must be installed because it contains the AI setup
tools.


F.

No, the Solaris 11 full n repository must be installed on the AI server.


G.

  No, you must have a prebuilt image that was created by the distribution constructor.





D.
  

  No, you must download the AI .iso image from Oracle first.



You are the administrator of on Oracle Solaris 11 AI server.
You added a client. Then you created a custom manifest, custom criteria, and a custom
profile for the client.
You made an error in the package path within the custom manifest.
When will the error appear?



A.

when the manifest is checked during client preinstall


B.

 when the manifest is used during client install


C.

 when the manifest is updated on the AI server


D.

 when the manifest is added to the AI server





D.
  

 when the manifest is added to the AI server



Explanation:
Note:
* The default AI manifest must work for any client that does not match a custom manifest,
for any service based on this image.


Page 6 out of 28 Pages
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