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Pass the Google Cloud Certified Associate-Cloud-Engineer Questions and answers with Dumpstech

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Viewing questions 91-100 out of questions
Questions # 91:

You have designed a solution on Google Cloud Platform (GCP) that uses multiple GCP products. Your company has asked you to estimate the costs of the solution. You need to provide estimates for the monthly total cost. What should you do?

Options:

A.

For each GCP product in the solution, review the pricing details on the products pricing page. Use the pricing calculator to total the monthly costs for each GCP product.

B.

For each GCP product in the solution, review the pricing details on the products pricing page. Create a Google Sheet that summarizes the expected monthly costs for each product.

C.

Provision the solution on GCP. Leave the solution provisioned for 1 week. Navigate to the Billing Report page in the Google Cloud Platform Console. Multiply the 1 week cost to determine the monthly costs.

D.

Provision the solution on GCP. Leave the solution provisioned for 1 week. Use Stackdriver to determine the provisioned and used resource amounts. Multiply the 1 week cost to determine the monthly costs.

Questions # 92:

(You are deploying an application to Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE). The application needs to make API calls to a private Cloud Storage bucket. You need to configure your application Pods to authenticate to the Cloud Storage API, but your organization policy prevents the usage of service account keys. You want to follow Google-recommended practices. What should you do?)

Options:

A.

Create the GKE cluster and deploy the application. Request a security exception to create a Google service account key. Set the constraints/iam.serviceAccountKeyExpiryHours organization policy to 8 hours.

B.

Create the GKE cluster and deploy the application. Request a security exception to create a Google service account key. Set the constraints/iam.serviceAccountKeyExpiryHours organization policy to 24 hours.

C.

Create the GKE cluster with Workload Identity Federation. Configure the default node service account to access the bucket. Deploy the application into the cluster so the application can use the node service account permissions. Use Identity and Access Management (IAM) to grant the service account access to the bucket.

D.

Create the GKE cluster with Workload Identity Federation. Create a Google service account and a Kubernetes ServiceAccount, and configure both service accounts to use Workload Identity Federation. Attach the Kubernetes ServiceAccount to the application Pods and configure the Google service account to access the bucket with Identity and Access Management (IAM).

Questions # 93:

You are managing several Google Cloud Platform (GCP) projects and need access to all logs for the past 60 days. You want to be able to explore and quickly analyze the log contents. You want to follow Google- recommended practices to obtain the combined logs for all projects. What should you do?

Options:

A.

Navigate to Stackdriver Logging and select resource.labels.project_id="*"

B.

Create a Stackdriver Logging Export with a Sink destination to a BigQuery dataset. Configure the table expiration to 60 days.

C.

Create a Stackdriver Logging Export with a Sink destination to Cloud Storage. Create a lifecycle rule to delete objects after 60 days.

D.

Configure a Cloud Scheduler job to read from Stackdriver and store the logs in BigQuery. Configure the table expiration to 60 days.

Questions # 94:

During a recent audit of your existing Google Cloud resources, you discovered several users with email addresses outside of your Google Workspace domain.

You want to ensure that your resources are only shared with users whose email addresses match your domain. You need to remove any mismatched users, and you want to avoid having to audit your resources to identify mismatched users. What should you do?

Options:

A.

Create a Cloud Scheduler task to regularly scan your projects and delete mismatched users.

B.

Create a Cloud Scheduler task to regularly scan your resources and delete mismatched users.

C.

Set an organizational policy constraint to limit identities by domain to automatically remove mismatched users.

D.

Set an organizational policy constraint to limit identities by domain, and then retroactively remove the existing mismatched users.

Questions # 95:

You have deployed an application on a Compute Engine instance. An external consultant needs to access the Linux-based instance. The consultant is connected to your corporate network through a VPN connection, but the consultant has no Google account. What should you do?

Options:

A.

Instruct the external consultant to use the gcloud compute ssh command line tool by using Identity-Aware Proxy to access the instance.

B.

Instruct the external consultant to use the gcloud compute ssh command line tool by using the public IP address of the instance to access it.

C.

Instruct the external consultant to generate an SSH key pair, and request the public key from the consultant.Add the public key to the instance yourself, and have the consultant access the instance through SSH with their private key.

D.

Instruct the external consultant to generate an SSH key pair, and request the private key from the consultant.Add the private key to the instance yourself, and have the consultant access the instance through SSH with their public key.

Questions # 96:

You want to run a single caching HTTP reverse proxy on GCP for a latency-sensitive website. This specific reverse proxy consumes almost no CPU. You want to have a 30-GB in-memory cache, and need an additional 2 GB of memory for the rest of the processes. You want to minimize cost. How should you run this reverse proxy?

Options:

A.

Create a Cloud Memorystore for Redis instance with 32-GB capacity.

B.

Run it on Compute Engine, and choose a custom instance type with 6 vCPUs and 32 GB of memory.

C.

Package it in a container image, and run it on Kubernetes Engine, using n1-standard-32 instances as nodes.

D.

Run it on Compute Engine, choose the instance type n1-standard-1, and add an SSD persistent disk of 32 GB.

Questions # 97:

You’ve deployed a microservice called myapp1 to a Google Kubernetes Engine cluster using the YAML file specified below:

Question # 97

You need to refactor this configuration so that the database password is not stored in plain text. You want to follow Google-recommended practices. What should you do?

Options:

A.

Store the database password inside the Docker image of the container, not in the YAML file.

B.

Store the database password inside a Secret object. Modify the YAML file to populate the DB_PASSWORD environment variable from the Secret.

C.

Store the database password inside a ConfigMap object. Modify the YAML file to populate the DB_PASSWORD environment variable from the ConfigMap.

D.

Store the database password in a file inside a Kubernetes persistent volume, and use a persistent volume claim to mount the volume to the container.

Questions # 98:

You have an application that looks for its licensing server on the IP 10.0.3.21. You need to deploy the licensing server on Compute Engine. You do not want to change the configuration of the application and want the application to be able to reach the licensing server. What should you do?

Options:

A.

Reserve the IP 10.0.3.21 as a static internal IP address using gcloud and assign it to the licensing server.

B.

Reserve the IP 10.0.3.21 as a static public IP address using gcloud and assign it to the licensing server.

C.

Use the IP 10.0.3.21 as a custom ephemeral IP address and assign it to the licensing server.

D.

Start the licensing server with an automatic ephemeral IP address, and then promote it to a static internal IP address.

Questions # 99:

You are deploying an application to a Compute Engine VM in a managed instance group. The application must be running at all times, but only a single instance of the VM should run per GCP project. How should you configure the instance group?

Options:

A.

Set autoscaling to On, set the minimum number of instances to 1, and then set the maximum number of instances to 1.

B.

Set autoscaling to Off, set the minimum number of instances to 1, and then set the maximum number of instances to 1.

C.

Set autoscaling to On, set the minimum number of instances to 1, and then set the maximum number of instances to 2.

D.

Set autoscaling to Off, set the minimum number of instances to 1, and then set the maximum number of instances to 2.

Questions # 100:

You have a workload running on Compute Engine that is critical to your business. You want to ensure that the data on the boot disk of this workload is backed up regularly. You need to be able to restore a backup as quickly as possible in case of disaster. You also want older backups to be cleaned automatically to save on cost. You want to follow Google-recommended practices. What should you do?

Options:

A.

Create a Cloud Function to create an instance template.

B.

Create a snapshot schedule for the disk using the desired interval.

C.

Create a cron job to create a new disk from the disk using gcloud.

D.

Create a Cloud Task to create an image and export it to Cloud Storage.

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Viewing questions 91-100 out of questions