Exam 70-336 Core Solutions of Microsoft Lync Server 2013

Exam 70-336 Core Solutions of Microsoft Lync Server 2013

Published: 06 November 2012
Languages: English, Japanese
Audiences: IT professionals
Technology: Microsoft Lync Server 2013
Credit towards certification: MCP, MCSE

Skills measured

This exam measures your ability to accomplish the technical tasks listed below. The percentages indicate the relative weight of each major topic area in the exam. The higher the percentage, the more questions you are likely to see on that content area in the exam.

Please note that the questions may test on, but will not be limited to, the topics described in the bulleted text.

Plan and design a Lync topology (25–30%)
Plan Lync site topology

Evaluate user distribution for central and branch site design; analyse business requirements for Persistent Chat ethical boundaries or room design; associate workloads to business requirements; analyse business requirements and plan Lync physical architecture; analyse capacity requirements and plan Lync physical architecture; analyse and design Lync SIP domains

Plan Lync Server support infrastructure

Define certificate requirements for internal servers; analyse and design load balancing, DNS, SQL, filestore,and Lync to support IPv6

Plan Lync servers

Define collocation of server roles; analyse hardware requirements; determine storage requirements for archiving and monitoring; determine OS version requirements; determine OS dependencies

Design a Lync Server HA/DR solution

Strategy for branch office scenarios, resiliency, SQL mirroring, central site failover; strategy for Persistent Chat; strategy for voice applications

Design Edge Services

Define certificate requirements for remote servers; analyse and design firewall settings, load balancing, DNS, reverse proxy; analyse port requirements

Preparation resources

Topology basics you must know before planning

Planning and deployment for Edge Server with Microsoft Lync Server 2013

Plan and design Lync features (25–30%)

Design conferencing

WAC; coexistence strategy for legacy conferencing; conference access numbers; conferencing regions; conferencing lifecycle; conferencing policies

Design Lync remote and external access

Federation; public IM connectivity; XMPP; mobile push notifications; directors; remote user access

Plan for Lync user experience

Contact list management; client version control; privacy; common area phone hotdesking; Music on Hold; Address Book web search/download

Plan for clients and devices

Lync mobility; phone edition or 3PIP devices; client authentication options; analogue devices; Lync users for VDI

Plan migration from previous versions

Migration sequence; decommissioning of old servers; client co-existence; monitoring and archiving; server co-existence; conference migration strategy

Plan end-user training for Lync client features

Enterprise Voice; Persistent Chat; managing a conference; participate in a conference with Lync mobile app, phone edition, Lync web app

Preparation resources

Phase 1: Plan your migration from Lync Server 2010

Deploy and configure Lync (20–25%)

Configure and publish topology

Mediation server collocation; trunks and gateways; Lync roles; multiple media gateway support; add/remove server features; deploy Edge Server

Configure conferencing

PIN policy; regions and conference dial in access numbers; meeting configuration; conference policies

Configure Lync remote and external access

Edge server; XMPP; PIC; federation; reverse proxy

Configure Persistent Chat

Categories and scope; rooms access; server policy; legacy endpoints; add-ins

Deploy and configure clients and devices

Lync client features; client policies; client security options; analogue or phone edition/3PIP policies; mobile device policies; Lync users for VDI

Migrate from previous versions of Lync

Consolidate legacy servers to a supported single version; move legacy users; migrate legacy configurations, conferences and Response Groups or LIS; move CMS or File Share Data

Configure HA/DR

Pool failover; site failover; invoke failover/failback; SQL mirroring, voice resiliency; map user experience to failover scenario

Preparation resources

Publish the topology

Migration from Lync Server 2010 to Lync Server 2013

Manage operations and data resiliency for Lync (25–30%)

Troubleshoot the Lync environment

Enable and collect logs; recover from failed server build; analyse event viewer; enable OCSLogger tracing; enable Best Practices Analyzer; verify name resolution

Manage the Lync environment

Run Lync BPA; enable or move Lync users; configure RBAC; maintain devices within the enterprise; configure Address Book; manage RGS delegated administration

Verify Lync environment health

Interpret Lync 15 monitoring reports and identify potential issues; configure synthetic transactions; test connectivity with Powershell Test Commandlet; configure core reliability and media quality monitoring; verify service health and CMS replication status

Mitigate data loss

Back up and restore application service data; filestore data and contacts; maintain and recover Lync 15 topology and LIS and RTC; recover CMS

Manage monitoring and archiving services

Deploy monitoring reports; configure CDR and quality of experience; Persistent Chat compliance; archiving; archiving with Exchange; archiving policies

Preparation resources

Operations
Lync Server 2013 best practices analyzer
Core solutions of Microsoft Lync Server 2013: (11) Disaster recovery


MCTS Training, MCITP Trainnig

Best Microsoft MCP Certification, Microsoft 70-336 Training at certkingdom.com

 

 


Westbridge Industries
General Overview
You work as a Communications Infrastructure Administrator for a company named Westbridge
Industries.
The company has its corporate headquarters (HQ) based in New York and a branch office in
Atlanta.
Existing Environment
Active Directory
The company has an Active Directory forest containing a single domain named
westbridgeind.com. 4000 users are based in the New York office and 220 users are based in the
Atlanta office.
Network Configuration
The New York office has a leased line connection to the Internet. The Atlanta branch office does
not have a direct connection to the Internet. The branch office connects to the New York office and
to the Internet via a WAN link between the two offices.
Communications Environment
The company currently has a Lync Server 2010 infrastructure and a Microsoft Exchange Server
2013 organization with all servers located in the New York office.
The company also has a Lync Server 2013 infrastructure in a test environment. The company is
testing the Lync Server 2013 infrastructure with a view to deploying Lync Server 2013 to the live
environment and migrating all users from Lync Server 2010 to Lync Server 2013.
After the successful deployment of Lync Server 2013, the Lync Server 2010 environment will
remain in place for a period of six months.
Lync Server 2013 Test Environment
The Lync Server 2013 test environment contains the following servers in the New York office:
A server named LyncFE1 runs Lync Server 2013 Enterprise Edition and is configured as a Front
End Server in a Front End Pool named FEPool1. The fully qualified domain name (FQDN of the
Front End Pool is fepool1.westbridgeind.com





A server named Exchange1 runs Exchange Server 2013 and is configured with both the Client
Access Server and Mailbox Server roles.
A server named LyncSQL1 runs SQL Server and is configured as a Back End Server.
A server named LyncEdge1 is configured as an Edge Server and provides remote access to the
Lync Server 2013 environment.
A server named WinSRV01 is configured as a domain member server and currently hosts no Lync
or Exchange roles.
Test user accounts have been created in both the New York and Atlanta offices to test the Lync
Server 2013 environment. The test users have been testing the Server 2013 environment using
either the Lync 2010 client software or the Lync 2013 client software.
The external Lync web services FQDN is webext.westbridgeind.com. The FQDN of
meet.westbridgeind.com has been configured as a simple URL for Lync meetings.
Testing Issues
The testing process for the Lync Server 2013 environment has raised the following issues:
Users in both offices receive an error message stating that the Lync Server is unable to connect
to the Exchange Server.
During conferences between users in the New York office, audio streaming works well.
However, during conference between New York users and Atlanta users, the audio streaming
often lags behind or drops completely.
Some document types can be shared during web conferences while other document types
cannot be shared.
Requirements
Planned Changes
After the issues raised in the current testing have been resolved, the Lync Server 2013
environment will be expanded and further tested before being deployed to the live environment.
The following changes will be made to the Lync Server 2013 environment:
An additional Front End Server named LyncFE2 will be deployed and added to the existing Front
End Pool.
Direct federation with a partner company will be implemented.





The Office Web Apps component will be deployed.
The Unified Contact Store will be implemented.
A Monitoring Server will be deployed and configured to save call quality data for 3 months.
Mobile device access to Lync Services will be enabled.
A manual backup of the Lync Server 2013 databases will be taken every week and copied to an
offsite location.


QUESTION 1
When Web conferencing with users from a partner company the users must be able to download
the Web conference content.
How would you enable this?

A. By configuring a Conferencing Policy.
B. By configuring a Group Policy Object.
C. By modifying the meeting configuration.
D. By configuring a Client Policy.

Answer: A

Explanation:


QUESTION 2
When Web conferencing with users from a partner company the users must be able to record the
Web conference.
How would you enable this?

A. By configuring a Conferencing Policy.
B. By configuring a Group Policy Object.
C. By modifying the meeting configuration.
D. By configuring a Client Policy.

Answer: C

Explanation:


QUESTION 3
You need to troubleshoot the error message received by the test users. The Centralized Logging
Service (CLS) is running with its default settings.
You plan to use ClsController.exe to help you use the logs to troubleshoot the issue.
In which order should you run the commands?

A. ClsController – start, ClsController – flush, ClsController – search, ClsController –stop.
B. ClsController – start, ClsController – stop, ClsController – flush, ClsController –search.
C. ClsController – flush, ClsController – start, ClsController – stop, ClsController –search.
D. ClsController – search, ClsController – flush, ClsController – start, ClsController –stop.

Answer: B

Explanation:


QUESTION 4
You need to request a certificate for the additional Front End Server.
Which of the following should you use as the common name in the certificate?

A. lyncfe2.westbridgeind.com
B. webext.westbridgeind.com
C. fepool1.westbridgeind.com
D. lyncfe1.westbridgeind.com
E. lyncdiscover.westbridgeind.com

Answer: C

Explanation:

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