The WIDGET1 OES NetWare server resides in .SLC. WIDGET. All of its associated volume objects reside in the same context. The JJenkins user object also resides in .SLC. WIDGET. What rights does he have, by default, to the SYS:\PUBLIC directory on WIDGET1?
A new employee has been hired by your company. She will be a member of a workgroup that creates your company's marketing materials. All workgroup files are stored on the WIDGET2 server in the MASTER directory on the DATA volume. She needs to be able to open and read existing files as well as modify them. She will also need to be able to create new files as well as delete old files. She will need to modify the file names of existing files from time to time. What rights assignments does she need to the MASTER directory to accomplish her work?
As a system administrator, you have a special directory containing important information that you need to remember. However, you don't want anyone to be able to see this file in the file system, even if they manage to authenticate as Admin. Which directory attribute could you use to accomplish this?
Your organization uses a database application to store names and addresses used in direct-mail campaigns. As the demand for your company's products has grown, the database file, stored on volume\ DATA, has become very large. Which file attribute could you assign to the database file to prevent it from being suballocated even though block suballocation has been enabled on the DATA volume?
Your company specializes in non-linear video production. Raw digital footage is stored on the DATA volume of your NetWare server. You have configured near-line storage on your server. All volumes on your server have migration enabled on them; allowing infrequently-used files to be migrated from the server volumes to the near-line media until they are needed again. However, the raw footage files on DATA are much too large for the near-line storage device. Which file attribute can you apply to these files to keep them from being migrated?
You're planning the network file system for an OES NetWare server. Your server has a mirrored 40 GB SCSI-3 hard disk drive array. On the array, you've decided to create one NSS volume named SYS. In addition to he default operating system directories created when NetWare is installed, you want to create a directory named USERS off the volume root where each user will have his or her home directory. You also want to create a directory named SPOOL off the volume root where print jobs waiting to be printed on the network printer will reside. Finally, you want to create a directory named APPS off the volume root where network- distributed applications will reside. Does this design meet with Novell guidelines?
Which of the following volume implementation strategies protects data by writing the same information redundantly to two or more hard disks at the same time?