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Citrix 1Y0-241 Exam - Topic 4 Question 77 Discussion

Actual exam question for Citrix's 1Y0-241 exam
Question #: 77
Topic #: 4
[All 1Y0-241 Questions]

Scenario: A Citrix Administrator needs to create local, limited-privilege user accounts for other administrators. The other administrators will require only:

Read-only access

The ability to enable and disable services and servers

Which built-in command policy permission level can the administrator use?

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: D

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Ruthann
4 months ago
Definitely not D, Read-only doesn't allow any changes.
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Rosio
4 months ago
Wait, can they really enable/disable services with just Operator? Sounds risky!
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Detra
4 months ago
I thought Sysadmin would be the right choice, but I guess not.
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Sheridan
4 months ago
Yeah, that makes sense for limited access!
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Ludivina
5 months ago
I'm pretty sure the answer is A, Operator.
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Susy
5 months ago
"Sysadmin" seems too powerful for just read-only access and managing services, so I’m leaning towards "Operator."
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Malcolm
5 months ago
I practiced a similar question, and I feel like "Network" might be too limited for what they need.
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Nobuko
5 months ago
I'm not entirely sure, but I remember something about "Read-only" not allowing any changes, so that can't be it.
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Lettie
5 months ago
I think the "Operator" permission level might be the right choice since it allows enabling and disabling services.
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Onita
5 months ago
Hmm, this is a tricky one. I'm torn between the Operator and Sysadmin options. The Operator level seems to match the requirements, but the "limited-privilege" part of the question makes me wonder if that's too much access. I'll have to think about this a bit more.
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Jovita
5 months ago
Okay, let me think this through. The question says the other administrators need read-only access and the ability to enable/disable services and servers. Based on that, I believe the Sysadmin permission level would be the best fit.
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Shaniqua
5 months ago
I'm a bit unsure about this one. The question mentions "limited-privilege user accounts", so I'm not sure if the Operator level is the right choice. Maybe the Read-only option would be more appropriate?
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Son
5 months ago
Hmm, this seems straightforward. I think the Operator permission level would give the other administrators the read-only access and ability to enable/disable services and servers that the question is asking for.
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Goldie
6 months ago
Hmm, I'm a bit unsure about this one. The networking aspect makes it seem complex, but I'll try to break it down and see if I can spot the likely cause.
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Chara
6 months ago
I'm pretty sure the answer is netstat, since that's the command line tool I've used before to check network connections.
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Leah
6 months ago
RegisterEvent() doesn't seem quite right. I think the key is finding the method that actually fires or emits the event, not just registers it.
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Jesusita
6 months ago
Hmm, I'm a little unsure about this one. The options cover a wide range of performance testing activities, and I want to make sure I understand which ones specifically fall under the "test planning and control" category. I'll need to review my notes to refresh my memory on the key tasks in that phase.
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Darrel
10 months ago
I'm voting for Operator, but only if they promise to wear a funny hat while managing the servers. Gotta keep it entertaining, right?
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Noel
10 months ago
User 3: Plus, a funny hat would definitely make server management more fun!
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Macy
10 months ago
User 2: Agreed, it provides the right level of access without giving too much control.
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Colette
10 months ago
User 1: I think Operator is the best choice.
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Teresita
11 months ago
Operator? More like 'oper-lame-tor', am I right? Just kidding, it does seem like the best option here.
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Bettina
9 months ago
C) Sysadmin
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Lovetta
9 months ago
B) Network
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Kayleigh
10 months ago
A) Operator
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Florinda
11 months ago
Hmm, I was thinking C) Sysadmin, but I guess that would be overkill. Operator looks like the sweet spot for this scenario.
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Bambi
10 months ago
Operator allows read-only access and the ability to enable and disable services and servers.
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Maybelle
10 months ago
Yeah, Sysadmin would be too much access for what they need.
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Denna
10 months ago
I think Operator is the right choice for limited-privilege user accounts.
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Howard
11 months ago
Hmm, that makes sense too. I guess it depends on the specific requirements of the Citrix Administrator in this scenario.
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Santos
11 months ago
D) Read-only is the way to go! Why give them more permissions than they need? Gotta keep that security tight, you know?
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Merilyn
10 months ago
D) Read-only is the way to go! Why give them more permissions than they need? Gotta keep that security tight, you know?
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Avery
10 months ago
A) Operator
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Gayla
11 months ago
I disagree, I believe the correct answer is C) Sysadmin as it provides the necessary permissions for other administrators to have read-only access.
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Fausto
11 months ago
The Operator policy seems like the right choice here. It allows for managing services and servers while keeping things read-only.
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Fernanda
10 months ago
Great, let's go ahead and set up the local, limited-privilege user accounts using the Operator policy.
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Kanisha
10 months ago
Operator policy it is then, it fits the requirements perfectly.
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Gwenn
10 months ago
I agree, it allows for managing services and servers while keeping things read-only.
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Clemencia
10 months ago
I think the Operator policy is the best choice for this scenario.
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Howard
12 months ago
I think the answer is A) Operator because it allows limited-privilege user accounts to enable and disable services and servers.
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