Your network contains an Active Directory domain named adatum.com. The domain contains two DHCP servers named Server1 and Server2.
Server1 has the following IP configuration.
Server2 has the following IP configuration.
Some users report that sometimes they cannot access the network because of conflicting IP addresses.
You need to configure DHCP to avoid leasing addresses that are in use already.
Solution: On Server1, you modify the EndRange IP address of the scope.
Does this meet the goal?
A. Yes
B. No
The given answer is correct.
The range of server 1 is 172.16.0.20 – 172.16.0.100. The range of Server 2 is 172.16.0.80 – 172.16.0.150. There is an overlap of IPs for .80-.100. If you modify Server1 to have an end IP of .79, this will solve the issue.
Only if have to register A record into DNS. DHCP can assign IP addresses even if is unauthorized.
The question is not about authorization. Both network scopes have duplicate IPs. The maximum end range of Server1 can be 172.16.0.79
A DHCP server must be authorized in the Active Directory before it can assign IP addresses
Answer: No