Sei sulla pagina 1di 27

Windows Server 2003 interview and certification questions 1. How do you double-boot a Win 2003 server box?

The Boot.ini file is set as read-only, system, and hidden to prevent unwanted editing. To change the Boot.ini timeout and default settings, use the System option in Control Panel from the Advanced tab and select Startup. 2. What do you do if earlier application doesnt run on Windows Server 2003? When an application that ran on an earlier legacy version of Windows cannot be loaded during the setup function or if it later malfunctions, you must run the compatibility mode function. This is accomplished by rightclicking the application or setup program and selecting Properties > Compatibility > selecting the previously supported operating system. 3. If you uninstall Windows Server 2003, which operating systems can you revert to? Win ME and Win 98. 4. How do you get to Internet Firewall settings? Start > Control Panel > Network and Internet Connections > Network Connections. 5. What are the Windows Server 2003 keyboard shortcuts? Winkey opens or closes the Start menu. Winkey + BREAK displays the System Properties dialog box. Winkey + TAB moves the focus to the next application in the taskbar. Winkey + SHIFT + TAB moves the focus to the previous application in the taskbar. Winkey + B moves the focus to the notification area. Winkey + D shows the desktop. Winkey + E opens Windows

Explorer showing My Computer. Winkey + F opens the Search panel. Winkey + CTRL + F opens the Search panel with Search for Computers module selected. Winkey + F1 opens Help. Winkey + M minimizes all. Winkey + SHIFT+ M undoes minimization. Winkey + R opens Run dialog. Winkey + U opens the Utility Manager. Winkey + L locks the computer. 6. What is Active Directory? Active Directory is a network-based object store and service that locates and manages resources, and makes these resources available to authorized users and groups. An underlying principle of the Active Directory is that everything is considered an objectpeople, servers, workstations, printers, documents, and devices. Each object has certain attributes and its own security access control list (ACL). 7. Where are the Windows NT Primary Domain Controller (PDC) and its Backup Domain Controller (BDC) in Server 2003? The Active Directory replaces them. Now all domain controllers share a multimaster peer-to-peer read and write relationship that hosts copies of the Active Directory. 8. How long does it take for security changes to be replicated among the domain controllers? Security-related modifications are replicated within a site immediately. These changes include account and individual user lockout policies, changes to password policies, changes to computer account passwords, and modifications to the Local Security Authority (LSA).

9. Whats new in Windows Server 2003 regarding the DNS management? When DC promotion occurs with an existing forest, the Active Directory Installation Wizard contacts an existing DC to update the directory and replicate from the DC the required portions of the directory. If the wizard fails to locate a DC, it performs debugging and reports what caused the failure and how to fix the problem. In order to be located on a network, every DC must register in DNS DC locator DNS records. The Active Directory Installation Wizard verifies a proper configuration of the DNS infrastructure. All DNS configuration debugging and reporting activity is done with the Active Directory Installation Wizard. 10.When should you create a forest? Organizations that operate on radically different bases may require separate trees with distinct namespaces. Unique trade or brand names often give rise to separate DNS identities. Organizations merge or are acquired and naming continuity is desired. Organizations form partnerships and joint ventures. While access to common resources is desired, a separately defined tree can enforce more direct administrative and security restrictions. 11.How can you authenticate between forests? Four types of authentication are used across forests: (1) Kerberos and NTLM network logon for remote access to a server in another forest; (2) Kerberos and NTLM interactive logon for physical logon outside the users home forest; (3) Kerberos delegation to N-tier application in another forest; and (4) user principal name (UPN) credentials.

12.What snap-in administrative tools are available for Active Directory? Active Directory Domains and Trusts Manager, Active Directory Sites and Services Manager, Active Directory Users and Group Manager, Active Directory Replication (optional, available from the Resource Kit), Active Directory Schema Manager (optional, available from adminpak) 13.What types of classes exist in Windows Server 2003 Active Directory?
o

Structural class. The structural class is important to the system administrator in that it is the only type from which new Active Directory objects are created. Structural classes are developed from either the modification of an existing structural type or the use of one or more abstract classes.

Abstract class. Abstract classes are so named because they take the form of templates that actually create other templates (abstracts) and structural and auxiliary classes. Think of abstract classes as frameworks for the defining objects.

Auxiliary class. The auxiliary class is a list of attributes. Rather than apply numerous attributes when creating a structural class, it provides a streamlined alternative by applying a combination of attributes with a single include action.

88 class. The 88 class includes object classes defined prior to 1993, when the 1988 X.500 specification was adopted. This type does not use the structural, abstract,

and auxiliary definitions, nor is it in common use for the development of objects in Windows Server 2003 environments. 14.How do you delete a lingering object? Windows Server 2003 provides a command called Repadmin that provides the ability to delete lingering objects in the Active Directory. 15.What is Global Catalog? The Global Catalog authenticates network user logons and fields inquiries about objects across a forest or tree. Every domain has at least one GC that is hosted on a domain controller. In Windows 2000, there was typically one GC on every site in order to prevent user logon failures across the network. 16.How is user account security established in Windows Server 2003? When an account is created, it is given a unique access number known as a security identifier (SID). Every group to which the user belongs has an associated SID. The user and related group SIDs together form the user accounts security token, which determines access levels to objects throughout the system and network. SIDs from the security token are mapped to the access control list (ACL) of any object the user attempts to access. 17.If I delete a user and then create a new account with the same username and password, would the SID and permissions stay the same? No. If you delete a user account and attempt to recreate it with the same user name and password, the SID will be different.

18.What do you do with secure sign-ons in an organization with many roaming users? Credential Management feature of Windows Server 2003 provides a consistent single sign-on experience for users. This can be useful for roaming users who move between computer systems. The Credential Management feature provides a secure store of user credentials that includes passwords and X.509 certificates. 19.Anything special you should do when adding a user that has a Mac? "Save password as encrypted clear text" must be selected on User Properties Account Tab Options, since the Macs only store their passwords that way. 20.What remote access options does Windows Server 2003 support? Dial-in, VPN, dial-in with callback. 21.Where are the documents and settings for the roaming profile stored? All the documents and environmental settings for the roaming user are stored locally on the system, and, when the user logs off, all changes to the locally stored profile are copied to the shared server folder. Therefore, the first time a roaming user logs on to a new system the logon process may take some time, depending on how large his profile folder is. 22.Where are the settings for all the users stored on a given machine? \Document and Settings\All Users 23.What languages can you use for log-on scripts? JavaScipt, VBScript, DOS batch files (.com, .bat, or even .exe)

Windows Server 2003 Active Directory and Security questions 1. Whats the difference between local, global and universal groups? Domain local groups assign access permissions to global domain groups for local domain resources. Global groups provide access to resources in other trusted domains. Universal groups grant access to resources in all trusted domains. 2. I am trying to create a new universal user group. Why cant I? Universal groups are allowed only in native-mode Windows Server 2003 environments. Native mode requires that all domain controllers be promoted to Windows Server 2003 Active Directory. 3. What is LSDOU? Its group policy inheritance model, where the policies are applied to Local machines, Sites, Domains and Organizational Units. 4. Why doesnt LSDOU work under Windows NT? If the NTConfig.pol file exist, it has the highest priority among the numerous policies. 5. Where are group policies stored? %SystemRoot%System32\GroupPolicy 6. What is GPT and GPC? Group policy template and group policy container. 7. Where is GPT stored? %SystemRoot%\SYSVOL\sysvol\domainname\Policies\GUID

8. You change the group policies, and now the computer and user settings are in conflict. Which one has the highest priority? The computer settings take priority. 9. You want to set up remote installation procedure, but do not want the user to gain access over it. What do you do? gponame> User Configuration> Windows Settings> Remote Installation Services> Choice Options is your friend. 10.Whats contained in administrative template conf.adm? Microsoft NetMeeting policies 11.How can you restrict running certain applications on a machine? Via group policy, security settings for the group, then Software Restriction Policies. 12.You need to automatically install an app, but MSI file is not available. What do you do? A .zap text file can be used to add applications using the Software Installer, rather than the Windows Installer. 13.Whats the difference between Software Installer and Windows Installer? The former has fewer privileges and will probably require user intervention. Plus, it uses .zap files. 14.What can be restricted on Windows Server 2003 that wasnt there in previous products? Group Policy in Windows Server 2003 determines a users right to modify network and dial-up TCP/IP properties. Users may be selectively restricted from modifying their IP address and other network configuration parameters. 15.How frequently is the client policy refreshed? 90 minutes give or take.

16.Where is secedit? Its now gpupdate. 17.You want to create a new group policy but do not wish to inherit. Make sure you check Block inheritance among the options when creating the policy. 18.What is "tattooing" the Registry? The user can view and modify user preferences that are not stored in maintained portions of the Registry. If the group policy is removed or changed, the user preference will persist in the Registry. 19.How do you fight tattooing in NT/2000 installations? You cant. 20.How do you fight tattooing in 2003 installations? User Configuration - Administrative Templates - System - Group Policy - enable - Enforce Show Policies Only. 21.What does IntelliMirror do? It helps to reconcile desktop settings, applications, and stored files for users, particularly those who move between workstations or those who must periodically work offline. 22.Whats the major difference between FAT and NTFS on a local machine? FAT and FAT32 provide no security over locally logged-on users. Only native NTFS provides extensive permission control on both remote and local files. 23.How do FAT and NTFS differ in approach to user shares? They dont, both have support for sharing. 24.Explan the List Folder Contents permission on the folder in NTFS. Same as Read & Execute, but not inherited by files within a folder. However, newly created subfolders will inherit this permission.

25.I have a file to which the user has access, but he has no folder permission to read it. Can he access it? It is possible for a user to navigate to a file for which he does not have folder permission. This involves simply knowing the path of the file object. Even if the user cant drill down the file/folder tree using My Computer, he can still gain access to the file using the Universal Naming Convention (UNC). The best way to start would be to type the full path of a file into Run window. 26.For a user in several groups, are Allow permissions restrictive or permissive? Permissive, if at least one group has Allow permission for the file/folder, user will have the same permission. 27.For a user in several groups, are Deny permissions restrictive or permissive? Restrictive, if at least one group has Deny permission for the file/folder, user will be denied access, regardless of other group permissions. 28.What hidden shares exist on Windows Server 2003 installation? Admin$, Drive$, IPC$, NETLOGON, print$ and SYSVOL. 29.Whats the difference between standalone and faulttolerant DFS (Distributed File System) installations? The standalone server stores the Dfs directory tree structure or topology locally. Thus, if a shared folder is inaccessible or if the Dfs root server is down, users are left with no link to the shared resources. A fault-tolerant root node stores the Dfs topology in the Active Directory, which is replicated to other domain controllers. Thus, redundant root nodes may include multiple

connections to the same data residing in different shared folders. 30.Were using the DFS fault-tolerant installation, but cannot access it from a Win98 box. Use the UNC path, not client, only 2000 and 2003 clients can access Server 2003 faulttolerant shares. 31.Where exactly do fault-tolerant DFS shares store information in Active Directory? In Partition Knowledge Table, which is then replicated to other domain controllers. 32.Can you use Start->Search with DFS shares? Yes. 33.What problems can you have with DFS installed? Two users opening the redundant copies of the file at the same time, with no file-locking involved in DFS, changing the contents and then saving. Only one file will be propagated through DFS. 34.I run Microsoft Cluster Server and cannot install faulttolerant DFS. Yeah, you cant. Install a standalone one. 35.Is Kerberos encryption symmetric or asymmetric? Symmetric. 36.How does Windows 2003 Server try to prevent a middleman attack on encrypted line? Time stamp is attached to the initial client request, encrypted with the shared key. 37.What hashing algorithms are used in Windows 2003 Server? RSA Data Securitys Message Digest 5 (MD5), produces a 128-bit hash, and the Secure Hash Algorithm 1 (SHA-1), produces a 160-bit hash. 38.What third-party certificate exchange protocols are used by Windows 2003 Server? Windows Server 2003 uses the

industry standard PKCS-10 certificate request and PKCS-7 certificate response to exchange CA certificates with third-party certificate authorities. 39.Whats the number of permitted unsuccessful logons on Administrator account? Unlimited. Remember, though, that its the Administrator account, not any account thats part of the Administrators group. 40.If hashing is one-way function and Windows Server uses hashing for storing passwords, how is it possible to attack the password lists, specifically the ones using NTLMv1? A cracker would launch a dictionary attack by hashing every imaginable term used for password and then compare the hashes. 41.Whats the difference between guest accounts in Server 2003 and other editions? More restrictive in Windows Server 2003. 42.How many passwords by default are remembered when you check "Enforce Password History Remembered"? Users last 6 passwords.

Windows Server 2003 IIS and Scripting interview questions 1. What is presentation layer responsible for in the OSI model? The presentation layer establishes the data format prior to passing it along to the network applications interface. TCP/IP networks perform this task at the application layer.

2. Does Windows Server 2003 support IPv6? Yes, run ipv6.exe from command line to disable it. 3. Can Windows Server 2003 function as a bridge? Yes, and its a new feature for the 2003 product. You can combine several networks and devices connected via several adapters by enabling IP routing. 4. Whats the difference between the basic disk and dynamic disk? The basic type contains partitions, extended partitions, logical drivers, and an assortment of static volumes; the dynamic type does not use partitions but dynamically manages volumes and provides advanced storage options 5. Whats a media pool? It is any compilation of disks or tapes with the same administrative properties. 6. How do you install recovery console? C:\i386\win32 /cmdcons, assuming that your Win server installation is on drive C. 7. Whats new in Terminal Services for Windows 2003 Server? Supports audio transmissions as well, although prepare for heavy network load. 8. What scripts ship with IIS 6.0? iisweb.vsb to create, delete, start, stop, and list Web sites, iisftp.vsb to create, delete, start, stop, and list FTP sites, iisdir.vsb to create, delete, start, stop, and display virtual directories, iisftpdr.vsb to create, delete, start, stop, and display virtual directories under an FTP root, iiscnfg.vbs to export and import IIS configuration to an XML file. 9. Whats the name of the user who connects to the Web site anonymously? IUSR_computername

10.What secure authentication and encryption mechanisms are supported by IIS 6.0? Basic authentication, Digest authentication, Advanced digest authentication, Certificatebased Web transactions that use PKCS #7/PKCS #10, Fortezza, SSL, Server-Gated Cryptography, Transport Layer Security 11.Whats the relation between SSL and TLS? Transport Layer Security (TLS) extends SSL by providing cryptographic authentication. 12.Whats the role of http.sys in IIS? It is the point of contact for all incoming HTTP requests. It listens for requests and queues them until they are all processed, no more queues are available, or the Web server is shut down. 13.Wheres ASP cache located on IIS 6.0? On disk, as opposed to memory, as it used to be in IIS 5. 14.What is socket pooling? Non-blocking socket usage, introduced in IIS 6.0. More than one application can use a given socket. 15.Describe the process of clustering with Windows 2003 Server when a new node is added. As a node goes online, it searches for other nodes to join by polling the designated internal network. In this way, all nodes are notified of the new nodes existence. If other nodes cannot be found on a preexisting cluster, the new node takes control of the quorum resources residing on the shared disk that contains state and configuration data.

16.What applications are not capable of performing in Windows 2003 Server clusters? The ones written exclusively for NetBEUI and IPX. 17.Whats a heartbeat? Communication processes between the nodes designed to ensure nodes health. 18.Whats a threshold in clustered environment? The number of times a restart is attempted, when the node fails. 19.You need to change and admin password on a clustered Windows box, but that requires rebooting the cluster, doesnt it? No, it doesnt. In 2003 environment you can do that via cluster.exe utility which does not require rebooting the entire cluster. 20.For the document of size 1 MB, what size would you expect the index to be with Indexing Service? 150-300 KB, 15-30% is a reasonable expectation. 21.Doesnt the Indexing Service introduce a security flaw when allowing access to the index? No, because users can only view the indices of documents and folders that they have permissions for. 22.Whats the typical size of the index? Less then 100K documents - up to 128 MB. More than that - 256+ MB. 23.Which characters should be enclosed in quotes when searching the index? &, @, $, #, ^, ( ), and |. 24.How would you search for C++? Just enter C++, since + is not a special character (and neither is C). 25.What about Barnes&Noble? Should be searched for as Barnes&Noble.

26.Are the searches case-sensitive? No. 27.Whats the order of precedence of Boolean operators in Microsoft Windows 2003 Server Indexing Service? NOT, AND, NEAR, OR. 28.Whats a vector space query? A multiple-word query where the weight can be assigned to each of the search words. For example, if you want to fight information on black hole, but would prefer to give more weight to the word hole, you can enter black[1] hole[20] into the search window. 29.Whats a response queue? Its the message queue that holds response messages sent from the receiving application to the sender. 30.Whats MQPing used for? Testing Microsoft Message Queue services between the nodes on a network. 31.Which add-on package for Windows 2003 Server would you use to monitor the installed software and license compliance? SMS (System Management Server). 32.Which service do you use to set up various alerts? MOM (Microsoft Operations Manager). 33.What languages does Windows Scripting Host support? VB, VBScript, JScript.

Windows 2000 administration questions 1. Explain hidden shares. Hidden or administrative shares are share names with a dollar sign ($) appended to their names.

Administrative shares are usually created automatically for the root of each drive letter. They do not display in the network browse list. 2. How do the permissions work in Windows 2000? What permissions does folder inherit from the parent? When you combine NTFS permissions based on users and their group memberships, the least restrictive permissions take precedence. However, explicit Deny entries always override Allow entries. 3. Why cant I encrypt a compressed file on Windows 2000? You can either compress it or encrypt it, but not both. 4. If I rename an account, what must I do to make sure the renamed account has the same permissions as the original one? Nothing, its all maintained automatically. 5. Whats the most powerful group on a Windows system? Administrators. 6. What are the accessibility features in Windows 2000? StickyKeys, FilterKeys Narrator, Magnifier, and On-Screen Keyboard. 7. Why cant I get to the Fax Service Management console? You can only see it if a fax had been installed. 8. What do I need to ensure before deploying an application via a Group Policy? Make sure its either an MSI file, or contains a ZAP file for Group Policy. 9. How do you configure mandatory profiles? Rename ntuser.dat to ntuser.man

10.I cant get multiple displays to work in Windows 2000. Multiple displays have to use peripheral connection interface (PCI) or Accelerated Graphics Port (AGP) port devices to work properly with Windows 2000. 11.Whats a maximum number of processors Win2k supports? 2 12.I had some NTFS volumes under my Windows NT installation. What happened to NTFS after Win 2k installation? It got upgraded to NTFS 5. 13.How do you convert a drive from FAT/FAT32 to NTFS from the command line? convert c: /fs:ntfs 14.Explain APIPA. Auto Private IP Addressing (APIPA) takes effect on Windows 2000 Professional computers if no DHCP server can be contacted. APIPA assigns the computer an IP address within the range of 169.254.0.0 through 169.254.255.254 with a subnet mask of 255.255.0.0. 15.How does Internet Connection Sharing work on Windows 2000? Internet Connection Sharing (ICS) uses the DHCP Allocator service to assign dynamic IP addresses to clients on the LAN within the range of 192.168.0.2 through 192.168.0.254. In addition, the DNS Proxy service becomes enabled when you implement ICS.

Microsoft Win32 interview questions

1. Tell the differences between Windows 95 and Windows NT? Lack of Unicode implementation for most of the functions of Win95. Different extended error codes. Different number window and menu handles. Windows 95 implements some window management features in 16 bits. Windows 95 uses 16bit world coordinate system and the coordinates restricted to 32K. Deletion of drawing objects is different. Windows 95 does not implement print monitor DLLs of Windows NT. Differences in registry. Windows 95 does not support multiprocessor computers. NT implementation of scheduler is quite different. Different driver models. Win95 was built with back-compatibility in mind and ill-behaving 16-bit process may easily corrupt the system. Win95 starts from real DOS, while WinNT uses DOS emulation when one needs a DOS. Win95s FAT is built over 16-bit win3.1 FAT (not FAT32!, actually, Win95s FAT contains two FATs). 2. What is the effective way of DIB files management? A: Memory-mapped file is the best choice for device-independent bitmaps. MMF allows to map the file to RAM/SWAP addresses and to let Windows handle all load/unload operations for the file. 3. What should you be aware of if you design a program that runs days/weeks/months/years? A: When your program should run for a long time, you should be careful about heap allocations, because if you use new/delete intensively in your application, the memory becomes highly fragmented with a time. It is better to allocate all necessary memory in this case

that many times small blocks. You should be especially careful about CString class which allocates permanent DLL 4. What are the advantages of using DLLs? DLLs are run-time modular. DLL is loaded when the program needs it. Used as a code sharing between executables. 5. What are the different types of DLLs? A: Extension, Regular and pure Win32 DLL (without MFC) 6. What are the differences between a User DLL and an MFC Extension DLL? A: Extension DLL supports a C++ interface, i.e. can export whole C++ classes and the client may construct objects from them. Extension DLL dynamically links to MFC DLLs (those which name starts with MFC??.DLL) and to be synchronous with the version it was developed for. Extension DLL is usually small (simple extension DLL might be around 10K) Regular DLL can be loaded by any Win32 environment (e.g. VB 5) Big restriction is that regular DLL may export only Cstyle functions. Regular DLLs are generally larger. When you build a regular DLL, you may choose a static link (in this case MFC library code is copied to your DLL) and dynamic (in this case you would need MFC DLLs to be presented on the target machine) 7. What do you have to do when you inherit from two CObject-based classes? A: First of all, this is a bad idea does not matter what tells you interviewer. Secondly, if you forced to use condemned rhombus structure, read Technical Note 16 in MSDN, which discusses why MFC does not support multiple inheritance and what to do in case you still need it (there are a

few problems with CObject class, such as incorrect information, returned by IsKindOf() of CObject for MI, etc.) 8. What are the additional requirements for inheritance from CWnd-based classes? A: Again, this is the bad idea. Try to find alternative solution. Anyway, if you have to multiply inherit from CWnd-based class, the following are additional requirements to the above conditions (again, this is extremely bad question for interview!!!): There must be only one CWndderived base class. The CWnd-derived base class must be the first (or left-most) base class. 9. What is a "mutex"? A: Mutexes are the mechanism of process synchronization that might be used to synchronize data across multiple processes. Mutex is a waitable object while a critical section is not. Mutexes are significantly slower than critical sections. 10.Whats the difference between a "mutex" and a "critical section"? Critical section provides synchronization means for one process only, while mutexes allow data synchronization across processes. 11.What might be wrong with the following pseudo-code: FUNCTION F BEGIN INT I=2 DO I=I+1 IF I = 4 THEN BREAK END DO

END A:This code is not thread safe. Suppose one thread increments I to 3 and then returns to the beginning of DO statement. Then it increments I to 4 and now context switch happens. Second thread increments I to 5. From this moment the code shown will execute forever until some external force intervention. Solution is obviously using some synchronization object to protect I from being changed by more than one thread. 12.What is a deadlock ? A: A deadlock, very simply, is a condition in which two or more threads wait for each other to release a shared resource before resuming their execution. Because all threads participating in a deadlock are suspended and cannot, therefore, release the resources they own, no thread can continue, and the entire application (or, worse, more than one application if the resources are shared between threads in multiple applications) appears to hang. 13.How can we create thread in MFC framework? A: Using AfxBeginThread. 14.What types of threads are supported by MFC framework? A: Working thread and windows thread. Working thread usually does not have a user interface and easier to use. Windows thread has an user interface and usually used to improve responsiveness of the user input. Message Map 15.When ON_UPDATE_COMMAND_UI is called? (message may vary) A: When a user of your application pulls down a menu, each menu item needs to know whether it should be displayed as enabled or disabled. The target of a menu

command provides this information by implementing an ON_UPDATE_COMMAND_UI handler. 16.What is a "hook"? A: A point in the Windows messagehandling mechanism where an application can install a subroutine to monitor messages. You need hooks to implement your own Windows message filter. 17.What are the difference between MFC Exception macros and C++ exception keywords? A:Actually, MFC macros may accept exception of only CException class or class, derived from CException, where as C++ exception mechanism accepts exception of ANY type Reusable Control Class 18.How would you set the background of an edit control to a customized color? A: You have several choices, but the simplest one is subclassing. Kruglinski in his "Inside Visual C++" describes pretty well this process. Generally, you derive the class from none control class, override the messages you want (like WM_CTLCOLOR) and then in init function like OnInitialUpdate of CDialog, subclass the control with SubclassDlgItem(). 19.What is Message Reflection? How could you accomplish the above task using message reflection? A: See Technical Note 62 of MSDN. Usually, message is handled in the parent class that means you have to override message handler for each parent. Sometimes it is nice to handle a message in the control itself, without parent invocation. Such handling mechanism is called message reflection. Control "reflects" message to itself and then processes it. Use

ON_<MESSAGE_NAME>_REFLECT macro to create a reflected message. 20.What is the command routing in MFC framework? A: CView => CDocument => CFrameWnd => CWinApp 21.Whats the purpose of CView class? CDocument class? What are relationships between them? A: The CView class provides the basic functionality for user-defined view classes. A view is attached to a document and acts as an intermediary between the document and the user: the view renders an image of the document on the screen or printer and interprets user input as operations upon the document. The CDocument class provides the basic functionality for user-defined document classes. A document represents the unit of data that the user typically opens with the File Open command and saves with the File Save command. Users interact with a document through the CView object(s) associated with it. A view is a child of a frame window. The relationship between a view class, a frame window class, and a document class is established by a CDocTemplate object. A view can be attached to only one document, but a document can have multiple views attached to it at once. 22.What class is responsible for document template in MDI application? A: CMultiDocTemplate. 23.What function must be used to add document template? A: AddDocTemplate. 24.What the main objects are created for SDI and MDI applications? A: CWinApp - application object. For MDI

application with New document implementation CDocTemplate, CDocument, CView, CMainFrame. If your application is SDI, your CMainFrame class is derived from class CFrameWnd. If your application is MDI, CMainFrame is derived from class CMDIFrameWnd. For MDI application CMDIChildWindow is also created. 25.We have a loop for 800,000. It fails on 756,322. How can we get the information before it fails? A: You could think of several way to debug this: Set the condition in debugger to stop when loop is passed around 756321 times. Throw an exception within a loop (may be not the best idea since exception does not show you the exact location of the fail. Create a log file and to put detailed information within a loop. 26.Our Debug version works fine, but Release fails. What should be done? A: There are four differences between debug and release builds:
o

heap layout (you may have heap overwrite in release mode - this will cause 90% of all problems),

compilation (check conditional compilation statements, assertion functions etc.),

pointer support (no padding in release mode which may increase chances of a pointer to point into sky)

optimization Windows admin interview questions

1. Describe how the DHCP lease is obtained. Its a four-step process consisting of (a) IP request, (b) IP offer, IP selection and (d) acknowledgement. 2. I cant seem to access the Internet, dont have any access to the corporate network and on ipconfig my address is 169.254.*.*. What happened? The 169.254.*.* netmask is assigned to Windows machines running 98/2000/XP if the DHCP server is not available. The name for the technology is APIPA (Automatic Private Internet Protocol Addressing). 3. Weve installed a new Windows-based DHCP server, however, the users do not seem to be getting DHCP leases off of it. The server must be authorized first with the Active Directory. 4. How can you force the client to give up the dhcp lease if you have access to the client PC? ipconfig /release 5. What authentication options do Windows 2000 Servers have for remote clients? PAP, SPAP, CHAP, MS-CHAP and EAP. 6. What are the networking protocol options for the Windows clients if for some reason you do not want to use TCP/IP? NWLink (Novell), NetBEUI, AppleTalk (Apple). 7. What is data link layer in the OSI reference model responsible for? Data link layer is located above the physical layer, but below the network layer. Taking raw data bits and packaging them into frames. The network layer will be responsible for addressing the frames, while the physical layer is reponsible for retrieving and sending raw data bits.

8. What is binding order? The order by which the network protocols are used for client-server communications. The most frequently used protocols should be at the top. 9. How do cryptography-based keys ensure the validity of data transferred across the network? Each IP packet is assigned a checksum, so if the checksums do not match on both receiving and transmitting ends, the data was modified or corrupted. 10.Should we deploy IPSEC-based security or certificatebased security? They are really two different technologies. IPSec secures the TCP/IP communication and protects the integrity of the packets. Certificate-based security ensures the validity of authenticated clients and servers. 11.What is LMHOSTS file? Its a file stored on a host machine that is used to resolve NetBIOS to specific IP addresses. 12.Whats the difference between forward lookup and reverse lookup in DNS? Forward lookup is name-to-address, the reverse lookup is address-to-name. 13.How can you recover a file encrypted using EFS? Use the domain recovery agent

Potrebbero piacerti anche