This page was exported from Top Exam Collection [ http://blog.topexamcollection.com ] Export date:Sun Jan 19 20:48:57 2025 / +0000 GMT ___________________________________________________ Title: Authentic Best resources for 1Z0-821 Test Engine Practice Exam [Q64-Q83] --------------------------------------------------- Authentic Best resources for 1Z0-821 Test Engine Practice Exam [2022] 1Z0-821 PDF Questions - Perfect Prospect To Go With TopExamCollection Practice Exam QUESTION 64Review the storage pool information:Choose the correct procedure to repair this storage pool.  Shut the system down, replace disk c3t3d0, and boot the system. When the system is booted, execute the zpool clear pool1 command.  Shut the system down, replace disk c3t3d0, and boot the system. When the system is booted execute the zpool online pool1 command.  Shut the system down, replace disk c3t3d0, and boot the system. When the system is booted, execute the zpool replace pool1 c3t3d0 command.  Shut the system down, replace disk c3t3d0, and boot the system. When the system is booted, execute the zpool replace pool1 c3t3d0 c3t3d0 command. You might need to replace a disk in the root pool for the following reasons:The root pool is too small and you want to replace it with a larger disk The root pool disk is failing. In a non-redundant pool, if the disk is failing so that the system won’t boot, you’ll need to boot from an alternate media, such as a CD or the network, before you replace the root pool disk.In a mirrored root pool configuration, you might be able to attempt a disk replacement without having to boot from alternate media. You can replace a failed disk by using the zpool replace command.Some hardware requires that you offline and unconfigure a disk before attempting the zpool replace operation to replace a failed disk.For example:# zpool offline rpool c1t0d0s0# cfgadm -c unconfigure c1::dsk/c1t0d0# cfgadm -c configure c1::dsk/c1t0d0# zpool replace rpool c1t0d0s0# zpool online rpool c1t0d0s0# zpool status rpoolSPARC# installboot -F zfs /usr/platform/`uname -i`/lib/fs/zfs/bootblk /dev/rdsk/c1t0d0s0 x86# installgrub /boot/grub/stage1 /boot/grub/stage2 /dev/rdsk/c1t9d0s0QUESTION 65The core dump configuration in your non global zone isA user is running a process in a non-global zone (testzone) and the process crashes. The process information is: user126632618017:46:42pts/20:00/usr/bin/bash When the user’s process crashes in testzone,a non-global zone,where will the core dump be saved?  The file will be stored in the non-global zone’s directory: /var/core/pprocess/core.hash.2663.  The file will be saved in the global zone’s directory: /var/core/core.bash.2663.  A core file cannot be generated in a non-global zone because it shares the kernel with the global zone.  The file will be stored in the global zone’s directory: /var/core/pprocess/core.bash.2663.  The file will be saved in non-global zone’s directory: /var/core/core.bash.2663 The line init core file pattern: /var/core/core.%f.%p will be used for the non-global process to determine the destination of the dump file.Note: When a process is dumping core,up to three core files can be produced: one in the per-process location,one in the system-wide global location,and,if the process was running in a local (non-global) zone,one in the global location for the zone in which that process was running.QUESTION 66After installing the OS, the following network configuration information is displayed from the system:Which option describes the state of this server?  The automatic network configuration option was chosen during the installation of the OS.  The manual network configuration option was chosen during the installation of the OS.  The network was not configured during the installation of the OS.  The network interface is configured with a static IP address. Only the loopback addresses are configured. No IP address is configured.QUESTION 67View the Exhibit.The file came from your Automated Installer (AI) install server.The file is ____________.  An AI SC profile for non-global zones  The default AI conf ig file for non-global zones  The default AI manifest for non-global zones  A custom AI manifest ai_manifest– Automated installation manifest file formatSynopsis/usr/share/install/ai.dtd.1Some customizations have been made, such as the selection of specific locales.QUESTION 68Oracle Solaris 11 kernel encounters a fatal error, and it results in a system panic.What type of file does this generate?  a.out  objdump  core dump  tape dump  crash dump Explanation/Reference:Explanation:A kernel panic is a type of error that occurs when the core (kernel) of an operating system receives an instruction in an unexpected format or when it fails to handle properly. A kernel panic can also follow when the operating system can’t recover from a different type of error. A kernel panic can be caused by damaged or incompatible software or, more rarely, damaged or incompatible hardware.When a server kernel panics it abruptly halts all normal system operations. Usually, a kernel process named panic() outputs an error message to the console and stores debugging information in nonvolitile memory to be written to a crash log file upon restarting the computer. Saving the memory contents of the core and associated debugging information is called a “core dump.”QUESTION 69You are asked to determine user jack’s default login directory. Which command would provide you with useful information?  cat /etc/passwd | grep jack  cat /etc/group | grep jack  cat /etc/shadow | grep jack  cat /etc/default/passwd | grep jack ExplanationExplanation:The /etc/passwd contains one entry per line for each user (or user account) of the system. All fields are separated by a colon (:) symbol. Total seven fields as follows.1. Username: It is used when user logs in. It should be between 1 and 32 characters in length.2. Password: An x character indicates that encrypted password is stored in /etc/shadow file.3. User ID (UID): Each user must be assigned a user ID (UID). UID 0 (zero) is reserved for root and UIDs 1-99 are reserved for other predefined accounts. Further UID 100-999 are reserved by system for administrative and system accounts/groups.4. Group ID (GID): The primary group ID (stored in /etc/group file)5. User ID Info: The comment field. It allow you to add extra information about the users such as user’s full name, phone number etc. This field use by finger command.6. Home directory: The absolute path to the directory the user will be in when they log in. If this directory does not exists then users directory becomes /7. Command/shell: The absolute path of a command or shell (/bin/bash). Typically, this is a shell. Please note that it does not have to be a shell.QUESTION 70Choose three options that describe the features associated with a Live Media installation.  does not allow the root user to log in to the system directly from the console (or any terminal)  provides a “hands free” installation  installs the desktop based packages  can be used to install only x86 platforms  installs the server-based set of packages only  allows both automatic and manual configuration of the network  installs both the server-based and desktop-based package The graphical installer is officially known as the “Live Media.” This means that Oracle Solaris can be booted into RAM, causing zero impact on your existing operating system.After it is loaded, you are free to experiment with Oracle Solaris to determine whether it is something you would like to install to your system.You can download Oracle Solaris 11 Live Media for x86, which is an approximately 800 MB image file, and use a DVD burner to create the disk, or you can use the ISO image directly in a virtual machine or through the Oracle Integrated Lights Out Manager (ILOM) Remote Console.The Live Media is not intended for long-term use. For example, any changes that you make to the system are lost when the system is shut down. Therefore, the next logical step is to install Oracle Solaris on the system, which the Live Media makes easy by placing an Install Oracle Solaris icon right on the desktop. But before we head down that road, let’s step back a bit and consider the installation options.Note: The Live Media provides administrators with an opportunity to explore the Oracle Solaris 11 environment without installing it on a system. The system boots off the media directly allowing administrators to start the installer should they choose to install it to a system.QUESTION 71The crash dump notification on your server is:Documentation states that there should be two core files for each crash dump in the /var/crash directory named vmdump.0 Which command should you choose to display theses two files?  savecore -f vmdump.0  dumpadm uncompressed  gunzip vmdump.0  dumpadm -z off Explanation/Reference:Explanation:Decompress using savecore -f vmdump.0savecore – save a crash dump of the operating system-f dumpfile Attempt to save a crash dump from the specified file instead of from the system’s current dump device. This option may be useful if the information stored on the dump device has been copied to an on- disk file by means of the dd(1M) command.QUESTION 72Which command should you choose to display the current parameters for the FSS scheduler?  dispadmin – c FSS  prionctl -c FSS  dispadmin -c FSS -g  priocntl -c FSS -g Explanation/Reference:Explanation:The dispadmin command displays or changes process scheduler parameters while the system is running.-c classSpecifies the class whose parameters are to be displayed or changed. Valid class values are: RT for the real-time class, TS for the time-sharing class, IA for the inter-active class, FSS for the fair-share class, and FX for the fixed-priority class. The time-sharing and inter-active classes share the same scheduler, so changes to the scheduling parameters of one will change those of the other.-gGets the parameters for the specified class and writes them to the standard output.QUESTION 73When speaking in an Oracle Support Engineer, you are asked to verify the version of the Solaris 11 build currently running on your system.Which command would display the Solaris 11 build version currently running on your system?  pkg info all  cat /etc/release  cat /etc/update  prtconf | grep -i update  pkg info entire Which Solaris release you are running on your system can be determined using the following command:cat /etc/releaseThis will tell you which release you are running and when it was released. The more recent your system, the more info is contained in this file.Example: # cat /etc/release Oracle Solaris 10 8/11 s10s_u10wos_17b SPARC Copyright (c) 1983, 2011, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Assembled 23 August 2011QUESTION 74Which three of the components could be used in a ZFS storage pool, but are not recommended configurations?  A file on a UFS file system  A Veritas Volume Manager (VxVM) volume  A LUN In a hardware RAID array  A disk slice from an SMI labeled disk  A Solaris Volume Manager (SVM) volume  An EFI labeled disk Explanation/Reference:Explanation:A: ZFS also allows you to use UFS files as virtual devices in your storage pool. This feature is aimed primarily at testing and enabling simple experimentation, not for production use. The reason is that any use of files relies on the underlying file system for consistency. If you create a ZFS pool backed by files on a UFS file system, then you are implicitly relying on UFS to guarantee correctness and synchronous semantics.However, files can be quite useful when you are first trying out ZFS or experimenting with more complicated layouts when not enough physical devices are present. All files must be specified as complete paths and must be at least 64 Mbytes in size.B, E: You can construct logical devices for ZFS using volumes presented by software-based volume managers, such as Solaris Volume Manager (SVM) or Veritas Volume Manager (VxVM). However, these configurations are not recommended. While ZFS functions properly on such devices, less-than-optimal performance might be the result.QUESTION 75You need to connect two nonglobal zones using a private virtual network.Identify the network resources required in the global zone to accomplish this.  an etherstub and two virtual network interfaces  a virtual bridge  two virtual network interfaces.  two etherstubs QUESTION 76The following line is from /etc/shadow in a default Solaris 11 Installation:jack: $5$9JFrt54$7JdwmO.F11Zt/ jFeeOhDmnw93LG7Gwd3Nd/cwCcNWFFg:0:15:30:3:::Which two are true?  Passwords for account jack must be a minimum of 15 characters long.  The password for account jack has expired.  The password for account jack has 5 characters.  A history of 3 prior passwords for the account jack is kept to inhibit password reuse.  The minimum lifetime for a password for account jack is 15 days. From the content of the /etc/shadow file we get:* username: jack* encrypted password: $5$9JFrt54$7JdwmO.F11Zt/jFeeOhDmnw93LG7Gwd3Nd/cwCcNWFFg* Last password change (lastchanged): Days since Jan 1, 1970 that password was last changed: 0* Minimum: The minimum number of days required between password changes i.e. the number of days left before the user is allowed to change his/her password: 15 Maximum: The maximum number of days the password is valid (after that user is forced to change his/her password): 30 Warn : The number of days before password is to expire that user is warned that his/her password must be changed: 3* Inactive : The number of days after password expires that account is disabled* Expire : days since Jan 1, 1970 that account is disabled i.e. an absolute date specifying when the login may no longer be usedQUESTION 77Which command would you use from the bash shell to determine the total amount of physical memory installed in your Solaris system (x86 and SPARC)?  uname -a  prtconf | grep -i memory  sysdef | grep -i memory  vmstat  prtdiag | grep -i memory The prtconf command prints the system configuration informa-tion. The output includes the total amount of memory,and the configuration of system peripherals formatted as a dev-ice tree.If a device path is specified on the command line for those command options that can take a device path,prtconf will only display information for that device node.QUESTION 78You wish to edit your crontab file that is located in /var/spool/cron/crontab. What command must you enter to edit this file?  crontab-e  crontab-e/var/spool/cron/crontab  crontab-r  crontab-e/etc/default/cron The main tool for setting up cron jobs is the crontab command, though this is not available on every Unix variant. Typically under Solaris or Linux one would create a new crontab or edit an existing one, using the command; crontab -eUse the ls -l command to verify the contents of the/var/spool/cron/crontabs file.Reference: System Administration Guide: Advanced Administration, Creating and Editing crontab FilesQUESTION 79View the Exhibit to inspect the boot environment Information displayed within a non global zone on your system.Which two options describe the solaris-1 boot environment?  The solaris-1 boot environment is not bootable.  The solaris-1 boot environment is incomplete.  The solaris-1 boot environment was created automatically when the non global zone was created.  The solaris-1 boot environment was created in the non-global zone using the beadm create command.  The solaris-1 boot environment is associated with a non active global zone boot environment. Explanation/Reference:Explanation:A: The – of the Active Column indicates that this boot environment is inactive, and hence not bootable.Note: The values for the Active column are as follows:R – Active on reboot.N – Active now.NR – Active now and active on reboot.“-” – Inactive.“!” – Unbootable boot environments in a non-global zone are represented by an exclamation point.D: beadm createCreates a new boot environment name, beName.Note: beadm listLists information about the existing boot environment, which is be Name, or lists information for all boot environments if be Name is not provided.Note: Using beadm Utility (Tasks)You can use the beadm utility to create and manage snapshots and clones of your boot environments.Note the following distinctions relevant to boot environment administration:* A snapshot is a read-only image of a dataset or boot environment at a given point in time. A snapshot is not bootable.* A boot environment is a bootable Oracle Solaris environment, consisting of a root dataset and, optionally, other datasets mounted underneath it. Exactly one boot environment can be active at a time.* A clone of a boot environment is created by copying another boot environment. A clone is bootable.QUESTION 80User brian changes the permissions for db_data this command:chmod 4755 db_dataWhat is true?  db_data now has permissions rwsr-xr-x and can be deleted only by user brian.  db_data now has permissions rwsr-xr-x and, if executed, will inn with the permissions of user brian.  db_data now has permissions rwxr-sr-x and can be deleted only by members of the group owning it.  The permissions for db_data cannot be determined, because the permissions prior to the change have not been specified.  db_data must be an ordinary file, because special permissions cannot be set on a directory. Explanation/Reference:Explanation:Use the chmod command to change permissions for a file or directory. You must be the owner of a file or directory, or have root access, to change its permissions.Here we do not know if brian owns db_data.Note:Permission7 full6 read and write5 read and execute4 read only3 write and execute2 write only1 execute only0 none0 — no permission1 –x execute2 -w- write3 -wx write and execute4 r– read5 r-x read and execute6 rw- read and write7 rwx read, write and executSolaris: Solaris Advanced User’s GuideQUESTION 81User jack on host solaris attempts to use ssh to log in to host oracle and receives this message:jack@solaris:~$ ssh oraclessh: connect to host oracle port 22: connection refusedWhat is the problem?  Host oracle does not have a valid host public key.  Host oracle does not have a valid host private key.  Host solaris does not have a valid host public key.  Host does not have a valid host private key.  Host solaris is not configured for host-based authentication.  Host oracle is not configured for host-based authentication.  Host oracle is not running the ssh service.  Host solaris is not running the ssh service. Explanation/Reference:Explanation:The host he is trying to connect to (oracle) is not running the required service (ssh).QUESTION 82When upgrading an existing system from Solaris 11 Express to Oracle Solaris 11, what happens to the datalink names?  They follow the default naming convention for the newly installed version.  They maintain their names.  They are called eth#.  They are called el00g#.  They are left unnamed, to avoid conflicts, and need to be renamed after the installation process is complete. Explanation/Reference:Explanation:Network configuration in Oracle Solaris 11 includes* Generic datalink name assignment – Generic names are automatically assigned to datalinks using the net0, net1, netN naming convention, depending on the total number of network devices that are on the systemNote: There is no upgrade path from Oracle Solaris 10 to Oracle Solaris 11. You must perform a fresh installation.QUESTION 83Your mentor suggests using the dladm rename-link command to rename the network datalinks.What are the two advantages of following this advice?  It can clarify which network interface has what purpose.  It can simplify specifying the network interface with the dladm modify-aggr command.  It can simplify specifying the network interface with the dladm modify-bridge command.  It can simplify IP filter rule changes if the network interface is replaced with a different type.  It can prevent accidental deletion of the network interface with the dladm delete-phys command.  It can prevent accidental deletion of the network interface configuration with the ipadm delete-addr command. A: To rename the bge0 link to mgmt0,enter the following command:# dladm rename-link bge0 mgmt0E: Consider that the bge0 device,whose link was named mgmt0 as shown in the previous example,needs to be replaced with a ce0 device because of a hardware failure. The bge0 NIC is physically removed,and replaced with a new ce0 NIC. To associate the newly added ce0 device with the mgmt0 configuration previously associated with bge0,enter the following command:# dladm rename-link ce0 mgmt0Note: How to Rename a DatalinkUse this procedure if you want to change a datalink name to a customized name. For example,some of the datalinks in upgraded system might have retained legacy hardware-based names and you want to change these names to generic ones.Note: dladm rename-link [-R root-dir] link new-link Rename link to new-link. This is used to give a link a meaningful name,or to associate existing link configuration such as link properties of a removed device with a new device. Loading … Best updated resource for 1Z0-821 Online Practice Exam: https://www.topexamcollection.com/1Z0-821-vce-collection.html --------------------------------------------------- Images: https://blog.topexamcollection.com/wp-content/plugins/watu/loading.gif https://blog.topexamcollection.com/wp-content/plugins/watu/loading.gif --------------------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------------- Post date: 2022-08-03 09:15:21 Post date GMT: 2022-08-03 09:15:21 Post modified date: 2022-08-03 09:15:21 Post modified date GMT: 2022-08-03 09:15:21