What happens to the VMs?

A vSphere administrator uses a Dedicated Failover Hosts Admission Control Policy in a cluster. An ESXi host fails and vSphere HA attempts to restart the VMs onto the dedicated failover hosts. The hosts have insufficient resources.

What happens to the VMs?
A . vSphere HA restarts VMs in another cluster.
B . vSphere HA attempts to restart the VMs on other hosts in the cluster.
C . vSphere HA powers down the VMs.
D . vSphere HA suspends the VMs until a host is available.

Answer: B

Which two configuration changes should the administrator make to achieve this?

An administrator manages a cluster containing Production and Test VMs. Production VMs run on a VSS port group and a storage array separate from the Test VMs. The administrator wants to prevent large

(>500GB) file transfers in Test from impacting Production.

Which two configuration changes should the administrator make to achieve this? (Choose two.)
A . Migrate the VSS port groups to VDS port groups.
B . Enable NIOC on the virtual switch.
C . Install a second virtual NIC in the Production VMs.
D . Move the Test VMs to a dedicated folder with CPU shares set to low.
E . Move the Production VMs to a resource pool with a memory reservation.

Answer: AC

What would cause this to occur?

Using vSphere HA Orchestrated Restart an administrator places the most mission critical VM in the highest priority. After a host failure, the highest priority VM fails to restart while VMs in high priority restart.

What would cause this to occur?
A . VMware Tools is not installed.
B . Proactive HA is disabled.
C . There are insufficient cluster resources.
D . Performance degradation VMs tolerate threshold is at default.

Answer: A