Your network contains an Active Directory domain named contoso.com. The domain contains two member servers named Server1 and Server2. All servers run Windows Server 2012 R2. Server1 and Server2 have the Failover Clustering feature installed. The servers are configured as nodes in a failover cluster named Cluster1. You add two additional nodes to Cluster1. You have a folder named Folder1 on Server1 that contains application data. You plan to provide continuously available access to Folder1. You need to ensure that all of the nodes in Cluster1 can actively respond to the client requests for Folder1.
What should you configure?
A . Affinity – None
B . Affinity – Single
C . The cluster quorum settings
D . The failover settings
E . A file server for general u
F . The Handling priority
G . The host priority
H . Live migration
. The possible owner
. The preferred owner
. Quick migration
. The Scale-Out File Server
Answer: L
Explanation:
All of the nodes in Cluster1 can actively respond to the client requests for Folder1 => Scale-Out File Server http://technet.microsoft.com/en- us/library/hh831349.aspx Scale-Out File Server for Application data (Scale-Out File Server) This clustered file server is introduced in Windows Server 2012 R2 and lets you store server Application data, such as Hyper-V virtual machine files, on file shares, and obtain a similar level of reliability, availability, manageability, and high performance that you would expect from a storage area network. All file shares are online on all nodes simultaneously. File shares associated with this type of clustered file server are called scale-out file shares. This is sometimes referred to as active- active. For more information on how to deploy ScaleOut File Server: http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh831359.aspx
Deploy Scale-Out File Server