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70-667 · Question #168

70-667 Question #168: Real Exam Question with Answer & Explanation

The correct answer is D. Add a new search scope at the service application level.. Federated search In this approach, you are enabled to display search results for additional content that is not crawled by your search server. With federation, the query can be performed over the local content index, or it can be forwarded to an external content repository where

Question

You configure a SharePoint server 2010 SP1. The farm contains a single search service application that has two index servers. The search index contains 3 million documents that reside on the SharePoint farm and 2 million documents that reside on a network file server named fileserver1. You need to ensure that users throughout the farm can specify that results for an individual search query should include content only from a network file that has the \fileserver1\documents UNC path. What should you do?

Options

  • AAdd a new federated search location.
  • BAdd a new index partition and distribute the existing index across the two index servers.
  • CAdd a second Search service application and distribute the indexed content across the two index servers.
  • DAdd a new search scope at the service application level.
  • EAdd a new content source and specify its start address.
  • FAdd a new crawl rule and specify the path where the rule will apply.
  • GAdd a new crawl rule and specify the path where the rule will apply.
  • HAdd a new search scope at the site administration level.

Explanation

Federated search In this approach, you are enabled to display search results for additional content that is not crawled by your search server. With federation, the query can be performed over the local content index, or it can be forwarded to an external content repository where it is processed by that repository's search engine. The repository's search engine then returns the results to the search server. The search server formats and renders the results from the external repository within the same search results page as the results from the search server's own content index. Add or remove an index partition A content source is a set of options that you can use to specify what type of content is crawled, what URLs to crawl, and how deep and when to crawl. Crawl rules apply to all content sources in the search service application. You can apply crawl rules to a particular URL or set of URLs to do the following things: Avoid crawling irrelevant content by excluding one or more URLs. This also helps reduce the use of server Resource: and network traffic, and to increase the relevance of search results. Crawl links on the URL without crawling the URL itself. This option is useful for sites that have links of relevant content when the page that contains the links does not contain relevant information. Enable complex URLs to be crawled. This option directs the system to crawl URLs that contain a query parameter specified with a question mark. Depending upon the site, these URLs might not include relevant content. Because complex URLs can often redirect to irrelevant sites, it is a good idea to enable this option on only sites where you know that the content available from complex URLs is Enable content on SharePoint sites to be crawled as HTTP pages. This option enables the system to crawl SharePoint sites that are behind a firewall or in scenarios in which the site being crawled restricts access to the Web service that is used by the crawler. Specify whether to use the default content access account, a different content access account, or a client certificate for crawling the specified URL. You can set search scopes at both the Search service application level and at the site administration level. Search scopes set at the service application level are available to all sites and site collections within the service application

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