Cyber Monday 2024! Hurry Up, Grab the Special Discount - Save 25%
- Ends In
00:00:00
Coupon code:
SAVE25
X
Welcome to Pass4Success
Login
|
Sign up
-
Free
Preparation Discussions
Mail Us
support@pass4success.com
Location
PL
MENU
Home
Popular vendors
Salesforce
Microsoft
Nutanix
Cisco
Amazon
Google
CompTIA
SAP
VMware
Oracle
Fortinet
PeopleCert
Eccouncil
HP
Palo Alto Networks
Adobe
ISC2
ServiceNow
Dell EMC
CheckPoint
Discount Deals
New
About
Contact
Login
Sign up
Home
Discussions
Micro Focus Discussions
Exam 050-733 Topic 1 Question 102 Discussion
Micro Focus Exam 050-733 Topic 1 Question 102 Discussion
Actual exam question for Micro Focus's 050-733 exam
Question #: 102
Topic #: 1
[All 050-733 Questions]
What is the "users" option in /etc/fstab used for?
A
It specifies the partitions that are not bootable by a user.
B
It allows any user to mount and unmount a partition.
C
It specifies the partitions that are bootable by a user.
D
A normal user is not allowed to access this partition.
Show Suggested Answer
Hide Answer
Suggested Answer:
B
by
Sabine
at
Nov 17, 2024, 10:11 AM
Limited Time Offer
25%
Off
Get Premium 050-733 Questions as Interactive Web-Based Practice Test or PDF
Contribute your Thoughts:
Submit
Cancel
Oliva
3 days ago
I'm not sure about that. I think it specifies the partitions that are bootable by a user.
upvoted
0
times
...
Owen
5 days ago
I agree with Casey. It makes sense to have that option for convenience.
upvoted
0
times
...
Felix
12 days ago
I'm going with B. Allowing any user to mount and unmount a partition seems like the most practical use of the 'users' option.
upvoted
0
times
...
Benedict
14 days ago
Haha, the 'users' option is clearly a trap question. It's a trap for all the users who think they can mount and unmount partitions willy-nilly!
upvoted
0
times
...
Casey
14 days ago
I think the 'users' option in /etc/fstab is used to allow any user to mount and unmount a partition.
upvoted
0
times
...
Marla
17 days ago
D sounds more correct to me. The 'users' option is used to specify partitions that a normal user is not allowed to access.
upvoted
0
times
...
Clorinda
21 days ago
I think the answer is B. The 'users' option allows any user to mount and unmount a partition, which seems like the most logical use case.
upvoted
0
times
Ciara
4 days ago
I think it's option C, specifying bootable partitions for users.
upvoted
0
times
...
Sabrina
5 days ago
I agree, option B makes the most sense.
upvoted
0
times
...
...
Log in to Pass4Success
×
Sign in:
Forgot my password
Log in
Report Comment
×
Is the comment made by
USERNAME
spam or abusive?
Commenting
×
In order to participate in the comments you need to be logged-in.
You can
sign-up
or
login
Save
Cancel
az-700
pass4success
az-104
200-301
200-201
cissp
350-401
350-201
350-501
350-601
350-801
350-901
az-720
az-305
pl-300
Oliva
3 days agoOwen
5 days agoFelix
12 days agoBenedict
14 days agoCasey
14 days agoMarla
17 days agoClorinda
21 days agoCiara
4 days agoSabrina
5 days ago