You have two Azure virtual networks named Vnet1 and Vnet2.
You have a Windows 10 device named Client1 that connects to Vnet1 by using a Point-to-Site (P2S) IKEv2 VPN.
You implement virtual network peering between Vnet1 and Vnet2. Vnet1 allows gateway transit Vnet2 can use the remote gateway.
You discover that Client1 cannot communicate with Vnet2.
You need to ensure that Client1 can communicate with Vnet2.
Solution: You resize the gateway of Vnet1 to a larger SKU.
Does this meet the goal?
You have an Azure virtual machine named VM1 that runs Windows Server.
The operating system on VM1 fails to fully initialize its network stack, and you cannot establish a network connection.
You need to establish an interactive shell session.
What should you use?
Your network contains an Active Directory Domain Services (AD DS> domain. The domain contains 20 Active Directory sites. All user management is performed from a central site.
You add users to a group.
You discover that group changes do NOT appear on a domain controller in a remote site.
You need to identify whether the group changes appear on other domain controllers.
What should you use?
You have an Azure virtual machine named VM1 that runs Windows Server.
The operating system on VM1 fails to fully initialize its network stack, and you cannot establish a network connection.
You need to establish an interactive shell session.
What should you use?
Your network contains an Active Directory Domain Services (AD DS) forest. The forest functional level is Windows Server 2012 R2. The forest contains the domains shown in the following table.
You create a user named Admin1.
You need to ensure that Admin1 can add a new domain controller that runs Windows Server 2022 to the east.contoso.com domain. The solution must follow the principle of least privilege.
To which groups should you add Admin1?
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