A+ Certification All-In-One For Dummies From CompTIA A+ Certification All-in-One For Dummies, 3rd Edition by Glen E. Clarke, Edward Tetz

Similar documents
A+ CERTIFICATION CHEAT SHEET

COURSE OUTLINE: A+ COMPREHENSIVE

CompTIA A Practical Application Exam, 2009 Edition

COURSE OUTLINE AND SCHEDULE: ASSIGNMENTS ARE DUE EACH MONDAY WEDNESDAY JANUARY Computing Overview

Chapter 14: Advanced Troubleshooting

LabSim Mapping Matrix

IT Essentials: PC Hardware and Software v4.1 Mapping to CompTIA A Objectives

IT SYSTEMS ADMINISTRATOR PROGRAM

CompTIA A+ Accelerated course for & exams

TestOut PC Pro - English 6.0.x COURSE OUTLINE. Modified

1 Marks: 1 Which of the following connectors is used with fiber cables? Choose one answer. BNC IEEE-1394 RJ-45

LabSim Mapping Matrix

Vendor: CompTIA Exam: Version: Demo

CompTIA A+ Practical Application Edition

CompTIA A+ Complete Lab Manual

KillTest *KIJGT 3WCNKV[ $GVVGT 5GTXKEG Q&A NZZV ]]] QORRZKYZ IUS =K ULLKX LXKK [VJGZK YKX\OIK LUX UTK _KGX

CompTIA A+ Practical Application 2009 (with Windows 7 Updates)

IT ESSENTIALS V. 4.1 Module 5 Fundamental Operating Systems

CompTIA A+s. Guide to 802: Managing. and Troubleshooting PCs. Mike Meyers' (Exam ) Fourth Edition. Mike Meyers.

Common Preventive Maintenance Techniques for Operating Systems

Below is a reviewer on the skill assessment exam of those who wanted to get a certificate on Computer Hardware

Course overview CompTIA A Official Study Guide

LabSim Mapping Matrix

If you have problems with your Windows system, you may use the Diagnostic Startup mode to diagnose the cause of the problem.

A+ Certification Guide. Chapter 16 (Part B) Networking

Standards and Competencies ITS 1.0 Perform maintenance on systems and components

LabSim Mapping Matrix

A+ Certification Guide. Chapter 15 Troubleshooting and Maintaining Windows

Aplus Pop Quiz Which device is not an example of a hot swap device? A. PS2 keyboard. B. USB Flash Drive. C. Flash memory card. D.

Table of Contents. Course Introduction. Table of Contents Getting Started About This Course About CompTIA Certifications. Module 1 / Server Setup

Master List of Key Topics

A+ Guide to Software: Managing, Maintaining, and Troubleshooting, 5e. Chapter 7 Fixing Windows Problems

A+ Guide to Software: Managing, Maintaining, and Troubleshooting, 5e. Chapter 9 Networking Practices

JK0-702 CompTIA E2C A+ Practical Application (2009 Edition) Exam

COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL. Contents. Assessment Test

Supporting Networked Computers

EXAM CRAM MCTS Microsoft Windows 7, Configuring. Patrick Regan

Chapter 8 Operating Systems and Utility Programs أ.أمل زهران

CompTIA A+ Complete Study Guide (Exams / ). Text with CD- ROM for Windows and Macintosh

A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, 7e. Chapter 16 Fixing Windows Problems

LabSim Mapping Matrix

The following documents are included with your Sony VAIO computer.

Vendor: CompTIA. Exam Code: Exam Name: CompTIA A+ Certification Exam (902) Version: Demo

OPERATING SYSTEMS & UTILITY PROGRAMS

A+ Guide to Managing & Maintaining Your PC, 8th Edition. Chapter 17 Windows Resources on a Network

CompTIA A+ Certification

CompTIA A+ 702 Practice Questions

Windows 2000 System Administration Handbook, 1/e

Full file at Chapter 2: Securing and Troubleshooting Windows Vista

Administering Windows 7 Lesson 11

M4.3-R4: INTRODUCTION TO ICT RESOURCES

Chapter 8 Operating Systems and Utility Programs

Course Description. Audience. Prerequisites. Skills Taught. Module Title. Duration. Course Outline :: CompTIA A+ Certification ::

CompTIA A Examination Objectives

Congratulations on purchasing Hawking s HWPS12UG 1-Port Parallel + 2 USB Ports Wireless G Print Server. The Hawking HWPS12UG is a powerful and

Computer to Network Connection

Quarter 1 Junior Networking. Testout PCPro / CompTIA A+

Windows 7, Enterprise Desktop Support Technician

Microsoft JK0-701 Questions $ Answers

Full System Restore Manually Run Cmd Prompt

Finding information on your computer

CompTIA IT Fundamentals V5 (Course & Lab) Course Outline. CompTIA IT Fundamentals V5 (Course & Lab) 24 Jan

Chapter 15: Advanced Networks

Computer Visions Course Outline

DCP585CW Windows Network Connection Repair Instructions

Chapter. Configuring the Windows 2000 Environment MICROSOFT EXAM OBJECTIVES COVERED IN THIS CHAPTER

Start Here. Important setup information. Remove all tape and lift display. Locate components

Chapter 1: Windows Platform and Architecture. You will learn:

How To Fix Regedit Windows Xp Installation >>>CLICK HERE<<<

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY CONCEPTS (56)

Getting Started. HP Business PCs

A+ Guide to Software: Managing, Maintaining, and Troubleshooting, 5e. Chapter 8 Networking Essentials

Q&As. Windows Operating System Fundamentals. Pass Microsoft Exam with 100% Guarantee

Understanding Bus Architectures

Networking the printer

Click on Close button to close Network Connection Details. You are back to the Local Area Connection Status window.

AirCruiser G Wireless Router GN-BR01G

Perform Manual System Restore Xp Safe Mode Winxp

Module 15. Troubleshooting Software

Getting Started. HP Business PCs

Chapter 11: It s a Network. Introduction to Networking

IT S NE VER DONE THAT BEFORE!

About the Presentations

Brief Table of Contents

Getting Started. Here's how to get started using your Zip 250 drive: 1. Unpack the Zip 250 drive and accessories.

Exam : JK Title : CompTIA E2C A+ Essentials (2009 Edition) Exam. Version : DEMO

Supporting Windows Vista and Applications in the Enterprise COURSE OVERVIEW PREREQUISITES AUDIENCE OBJECTIVES COURSE OUTLINE. Course No.

Computer Repair Technology

CompTIA A+ 901 & 902 Labs. Course Outline. CompTIA A+ 901 & 902 Labs. 11 Mar

Chapter 11: Networks

Table of Contents. Installation and Software 1

Identify the features of network and client operating systems (Windows, NetWare, Linux, Mac OS)

Comptia Passguide Exam Bundle

50331 Windows Client, Enterprise Desktop Support Technician

IT Essentials: PC Hardware and Software v4.1 Scope and Sequence

CompTIA A+ Certification ( ) Study Guide Table of Contents

Lesson 3: Identifying Key Characteristics of Workgroups and Domains

Chapter 12: Advanced Operating Systems

Cisco Press. 800 East 96th Street. Indianapolis, Indiana USA

Fix network connection issues in Windows 10

Transcription:

Cheat Sheet A+ Certification All-In-One For Dummies From CompTIA A+ Certification All-in-One For Dummies, 3rd Edition by Glen E. Clarke, Edward Tetz Windows Recovery Tools for the A+ Certification Exams One of the hardest tasks to perform when troubleshooting a system is fixing a system that will not boot. The A+ Certification exams expect you to be comfortable with the different recovery tools available in Windows. This table reviews popular recovery tools and specifies where you can find the recovery tool be sure to know these for the exam. Utility Description Access Recovery Console Command line interface for Boot off the Windows installation CD troubleshooting disk issues and boot problems Repair Mode Provides access to GUI and command line recovery tools Boot off the Vista installation CD Restore points A snap-shot of a system s configuration; used to revert to a system s state before a driver or software was installed From the Search in the Start menu, type System Restore. Select Restore My Computer to an Earlier Time and click Next. Choose your desired restore point and click Next, and then click Next again. Windows will now boot to that restore point. Windows 7 and Vista allow you to boot your operating system to a restore point which allows you to revert back to that system configuration very useful if your system has been hit with a virus. In order to boot to a restore point, you boot off the Windows 7/Vista Installation CD/DVD and choose Repair Your Computer, then System Restore from the System Recovery dialog box. You can also get to restore points through Safe Mode, which could prove useful if you have been hit with a virus. Safe Mode Loads the operating system with minimal drivers An advanced startup menu option (F8)

Last Known Good Configuration Automatic System Recovery (ASR) Loads the configuration from the last time you successfully booted and logged on An automated installation and restore of Windows An advanced startup menu option (F8) Press F2 during bootup RAID Types for the A+ Certification Exams RAID (Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks) is a method of implementing redundancy (duplicated information) on your hard drives if one disk fails, the other disk(s) can provide the missing information. There are many different levels of RAID, but the following are the only RAID levels pertinent to the A+ exams: RAID 0: Disk striping (striped volume). With RAID level 0, the data is split across drives with no data redundancy. RAID level 0 improves read and write performance by writing to multiple drives at the same time. You need a minimum of two drives. RAID 1: Disk mirroring/duplexing (mirrored volume). With disk mirroring, the data is written to both drives involved in the mirror to provide data redundancy. Windows 7 supports disk mirroring. RAID 5: Disk striping with parity (RAID 5 volume). With RAID 5 volumes, the data is written to multiple drives along with parity information that is used to help recover data if a single drive fails. RAID 5 volumes need a minimum of three disks. RAID 10: Mirrored disk striping. RAID level 10 is also known as RAID 1+0 because it is disk striping while mirroring the data written in the stripe.

Bus Architectures for the A+ Certification Exams Another term for the expansion slots on a computer s motherboard is bus slots. A number of different bus architectures have been developed over time. For the A+ exams, you need to be able to identify the differences between each of these bus architectures and know which ones are more popular today. Architecture Bus Width Speed (In Bits) ISA 8/16 8 MHz EISA 32 8 MHz PCI 32/64 33 MHz AGP 32 66 MHz (1x), 133 MHz (2x), 266 MHz (4x), 533 MHz (8x) PCMCIA 16 33 MHz (laptops) PCIe Serial Uses multiple lanes, with each lane carrying 250 Mbps. As an example, a PCIe x1 slot can carry data at 250 Mbps, while a PCIe x4 slot can carry data at 1 Gbps. PCIe version 2 doubles those transfer rates. USB and FireWire Standards for the A+ Certification Exams The most popular ports used today on the system are the USB and FireWire ports which allow you to connect devices such as flash drives, digital cameras, and digital video cameras. This table compares features of USB and FireWire, including the transfer rate and number of devices supported. Standard Transfer Rate Device Support USB 1.0 12 Mbps 127 devices USB 2.0 480 Mbps 127 devices USB 3.0 5 Gbps 127 devices IEEE 1394 400 Mbps; also known as FireWire 63 devices IEEE 1394b 800 Mbps; also known as FireWire 800 63 devices

Windows XP Boot Files for the A+ Certification Exams Windows XP requires four core files to boot the computer. You will need to understand what they are on your A+ Certification exam. The four core files are: ntldr: Operating system loader code boot.ini: Builds the operating system selection menu ntdetect.com: Performs hardware detection ntoskrnl.exe: Core kernel code responsible for tasks such as thread management Windows 7 and Windows Vista Boot Files for the A+ Certification Exams Windows 7 and Windows Vista utilize four boot files, and you will need an understanding of all four of them for the A+ Certification exams. The four boot files for Windows 7 and Vista are: bootmgr: Operating system loader code; similar to ntldr in previous versions of Windows Boot Configuration Database (BCD): Builds the operating system selection menu; similar to boot.ini in Windows XP, but data resides in the BCD store. You can edit the boot configuration data with the bcdedit utility. winload.exe: Loads the Vista operating system if selected from the operating system selection menu provided by BCD winresume.exe: Resumes the Vista operating system if the system is started from a hibernate state Power-On Self-Test Error Codes Categories for the A+ Certification Exams Each BIOS manufacturer has its own diagnostic codes that identify specific POST errors. You need to consult the BIOS documentation for the diagnostic codes for your BIOS, but the general breakdown of the code categories is as follows: 100 199: Motherboard error 200 299: Memory error 300 399: Keyboard error 600 699: Floppy drive error 1400 1499: Printer error 1700 1799: Hard drive error

Windows Troubleshooting Utilities for the A+ Certification Exams As an A+ Certified Professional you will troubleshoot a number of different problems on the system this table outlines some of the popular utilities you will use to support or troubleshoot a system. Be sure to know these before taking the A+ Certification exams! Filename Name Description chkdisk.exe Check Disk Check your hard drive for problems with the file system and for bad sectors. regedit.exe Registry Editor Make changes to Registry values; can be used to make selective backups. defrag.exe Disk Defragmenter Used from the command line, or graphically through the Microsoft Management Console (MMC). ntbackup.exe Windows NT backup Back up files to tape or any writable file system. sfc.exe System File Checker Verifies that system files have not been modified; or, if they have, replaces them with the original. taskman.exe Task Manager See running programs and services, terminate problems, and view rudimentary performance information about the system. perfmon.exe Performance Console View detailed performance information msconfig.exe System Configuration Tool drwtsn32.exe Dr. Watson System Information Event Viewer Reconfigure the boot process for troubleshooting and diagnosing the boot process. Configure the level of logging you want to do when applications crash. View hardware and configuration information for your computer. Logging component of the operating system; the central location for all logging activity.

Windows Network Troubleshooting Utilities for the A+ Certification Exams When problems arise on a Windows network, you can use the following utilities to do your troubleshooting. Having a clear understanding of all of them will help you on the A+ Certification exams. ipconfig: Display basic TCP/IP configuration, such as IP address, subnet mask, and default gateway. ipconfig /all: Display TCP/IP settings, including your Media Access Control (MAC) address, domain name system (DNS) server, and lease information. ipconfig /release: Release your IP address. ipconfig /renew: Renew your IP address. ping <IP address> or ping <host name>: Send four test messages to the IP address or host name you specify; verify whether the other system is up and running. netstat: Display TCP/IP protocol statistics and connection information. Can be used to see who is connected to your system; what ports are open. nslookup: Troubleshoot DNS problems. For example, you can get a listing of all the records in DNS using nslookup. arp: Troubleshoot ARP. Shows MAC address. For example, you can use arp -a to view your Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) cache.

Windows Security Best Practices for the A+ Certification Exams One of the most important skills to have as an A+ Certified Professional is the capability of securing Windows systems and networks. And even if you are not working in a networked environment, you can apply these same skills to your customers with home Internet machines. Harden the operating system: Uninstall any software you are not using and stop any services not being used. The more software that is running, the more potential security holes in the system. Patch the systems: Keep the operating systems and devices up to date with Service Packs and security patches. Use a firewall: Ensure that there is a firewall between your system and the Internet. A firewall prevents hackers from connecting to your system Use strong passwords: Ensure that all user accounts use a strong password (at least eight characters, and uses a mix of uppercase and lowercase characters, numbers, and symbols). Enable auditing: Log any suspicious activity on the system so you are aware of it. Secure your wireless routers: If you have no need for wireless, disable this functionality on your wireless router. If you are using wireless, secure it by changing the SSID, disabling SSID broadcasting, and encrypting traffic with WEP, WPA, or WPA2 (best option). You should also secure the wireless router by setting a strong password for the admin account and disable DHCP on the router. You will then need to configure all your clients with static IP addresses. Use antivirus software: Install antivirus software on all servers and client machines to help protect your systems from a virus. Make sure that your virus definition database is frequently updated.

10 or So Things You Might Have Forgotten for the A+ Certification Exams With the massive amount of information you re required to know for the A+ Certification exams, there are bound to be a few things that might slip past you. Here s a quick list of some things you ll need to know for the A+ Certification exams that you might have easily forgotten or overlooked. Contrast ratio: A value measuring the brightness of different colors such as white versus black. The larger the ratio, the better the picture quality on the display. Native Resolution: The actual resolution of a monitor, as opposed to the display resolution which may be set lower which scales the image to the display area of the monitor. Creation of files: You can create a file in any folder on your hard drive by right-clicking in an empty area and choosing a document type from the New menu. Files can also be created from applications by choosing the application s save feature. Grayware: A term used to describe software that performs unwanted actions. Grayware encompasses malicious software such as adware and spyware. Be sure to have malware protection software loaded on your system to protect against forms of grayware. Spam: An unsolicited e-mail message. Today s e-mail servers are being hit with a wealth of unsolicited e-mail messages a day from companies that are trying to sell services or products. Be sure to configure spam filters on your e-mail servers and e-mail clients. KVM switch: A device that allows you share a keyboard, video device (monitor), and mouse between several computers while being able to quickly switch between them. Reset page count: A troubleshooting tip for printers if you find the printer reports low toner and you know there is more than enough toner available then it could be that the printer is gauging the toner level by the number of pages printed. Find out how to reset the page count on your printer to get rid of the low toner error. Avoid trip hazards: You may create trip hazards when doing things like testing a replacement network cable by using a network jack which is further away or laying out tools and computer components in a walkway by a desk. Always ensure that you are not needlessly risking the safety of yourself or others. Heavy devices: Most computer equipment is light enough for a single person to handle while many servers and UPSs will require two people to move or place in a server rack. Always ensure that you have help for these and other heavy items and bend with your knees to prevent injury. Hot components: As equipment is used, many components will build up heat, which can injure you. This is especially true of both computer and printer components. When servicing equipment, ensure that you exercise proper care when hot components are present.

Odors: When troubleshooting system components be aware of unexpected odors or smells that may lead you to the source of the problem or signal an immediate danger. For example, burned smells could identify overheating components or melted connectors. Taskbar: The bar at bottom of the Windows desktop which displays the Start menu, all open applications and documents, and contains the system tray (systray). Systray: The systray (or system tray) is on the right side of the taskbar and displays many running processes, known as background processes that run in the background but do not have a visual interface until you click on the icon in the system tray. Most of these processes are accessed by clicking or right-clicking on the icon in the system tray so that you can change the settings of the running program or terminate the process by choosing quit or exit from the menu that appears. If there are too many items to display, they can be shown by clicking on an arrow on the left of the systray. Removal of peripherals: One of the processes in the systray is the Safely Remove Hardware tool. When you insert devices such as a USB flash drive an icon appears in the systray for the removable hardware. By clicking on this icon you will see a list of devices that can be stopped and safely removed when you are ready to unplug the drive.