You have a single-tier Visual Studio Team Foundation Server 2010 environment. You create the DNS CNAME
record that maps tfs.contoso.com as an alias for the application tier server name.
You receive alert e-mails for a Work Item Changed event. The alerts include Visual Studio 2010 Team Web
Access links that use the server name instead of the alias. You need to ensure that Team Web Access links in
alert e-mails use the alias instead of the server name.
What should you do?
You have a single-tier Visual Studio Team Foundation Server 2010 environment. You create the DNS CNAME
record that maps tfs.contoso.com as an alias for the application tier server name.
You receive alert e-mails for a Work Item Changed event. The alerts include Visual Studio 2010 Team Web
Access links that use the server name instead of the alias. You need to ensure that Team Web Access links in
alert e-mails use the alias instead of the server name.
What should you do?
You have a Visual Studio Team Foundation Server 2010 environment. Your company develops a custom code
analysis rule set for use in a team project. You need to ensure that the team project is utilizing the custom code
analysis rule set. You add the Code Analysis check-in policy to the team project.
What should you do next?
You have a dual-tier Visual Studio Team Foundation Server 2010 environment. The Team Foundation Server
databases are backed up nightly. You modify source code in a solution but you are not yet ready to check in the
pending changes.
You need to share the pending changes with team members without checking them in, and ensure that they are
backed up during the normal Team Foundation Server backup process.
What should you do?
Your company has a main office and a branch office. Multiple Visual Studio Team Foundation Server 2010
environments are deployed in the main office. A Team Foundation Server 2010 Proxy server is deployed in the
branch office.
You need to configure the proxy server to cache version control files for all current and future team project
collections from each environment.
What should you do?
You have a single-tier Visual Studio Team Foundation Server 2010 environment. You create the DNS CNAME
record that maps tfs.contoso.com as an alias for the application tier server name.
You receive alert e-mails for a Work Item Changed event. The alerts include Visual Studio 2010 Team Web
Access links that use the server name instead of the alias. You need to ensure that Team Web Access links in
alert e-mails use the alias instead of the server name.
What should you do?
You have a Visual Studio Team Foundation Server 2010 environment. You are setting up Visual Studio Lab
Management 2010. You need to store virtual machine templates used by the virtual lab environment.
What should you do?
You have a Visual Studio Team Foundation Server 2010 environment. Your build lab includes multiple build
servers.
You configure the build servers, build controllers, and build agents for a team project collection. You customize
the build process workflow file to include custom activities that you have compiled into an assembly.
You need to ensure that the assembly is loaded by the build service process on the build servers.
What should you do?
Lead your way to certificates!
You have a Visual Studio Team Foundation Server 2010 environment that includes team project collections
named CollectionA and CollectionB. You intend to perform maintenance on CollectionA while still allowing
users to connect to CollectionB.
You need to prevent end users from using CollectionA, and display a notification that CollectionA is offline, but
still associated with Team Foundation Server, to users who attempt to connect to the team project collection.
What should you do?
You are monitoring a Visual Studio Team Foundation Server 2010 environment. You need to monitor the
number of requests over time for the default team project collection.
What should you do?