Veeam Certified Engineer v12

Here you have the best Veeam VMCE v12 practice exam questions

  • You have 61 total questions to study from
  • Each page has 5 questions, making a total of 13 pages
  • You can navigate through the pages using the buttons at the bottom
  • This questions were last updated on December 17, 2024
Question 1 of 61

A Scale-out Backup Repository with one local extent has been configured as follows.

A daily VMware backup job retention is 31 days, keeping weekly GFS full backups for 14 weeks.

It is Mar, 20. A file from a backup that occurred the week of Jan, 1 must be recovered. Where is the data?

    Correct Answer: C

    The backup from the week of January 1 must be recovered and today is March 20, which means the backup is older than 21 days but less than 60 days. Since the 'Move backups to object storage as they age out of the operational restore window' option is enabled and set to 21 days in the Capacity Tier, the backup will have already been moved to the capacity tier. The Archive Tier is not enabled, so the data cannot be there. Therefore, the data will be in the capacity tier.

Question 2 of 61

A photography company provides online purchase of photographs. The core of the business operates from an Oracle database that stores all company images. New photos are continuously added to the database at widely variable intervals. Company policy only requires the database to be protected.

Which Veeam Feature will provide complete backup and recovery for this database?

    Correct Answer: B

    The Veeam Plug-in for Oracle RMAN is specifically designed to integrate with Oracle's native RMAN backup and recovery solution. By using this plug-in, the backup process can be tightly integrated with the Oracle database, ensuring backup consistency and reliable recovery. The policy of backing up the database daily and the archived redo logs at 15-minute intervals ensures that both full backups and incremental changes are captured, providing comprehensive protection and enabling point-in-time recovery. This aligns perfectly with the company's policy requirements and the nature of Oracle databases.

Question 3 of 61

A business has the following new regulatory requirements to follow:

3-2-1

Prevent the most recent 31 days of any backup files from being deleted or modified

Keep 1 copy of a monthly restore point around for 2 years

They have the following setup:

A standalone repository on a NAS

A backup job keeping 31 days of restore points

A backup copy job to an Amazon S3 Repository, keeping 31 days of backups and 24 monthly GFS restore points

Which two actions should the engineer take to change the environment to meet the new requirements? (Choose two.)

    Correct Answer: D, E

    To meet the new regulatory requirements, the engineer should move the backups from the NAS to a Linux Hardened Repository and enable immutability in Amazon S3. This ensures that the most recent 31 days of backup files cannot be deleted or modified, as immutability is supported in both a Linux Hardened Repository and Amazon S3. The requirement to keep one copy of a monthly restore point for 2 years is already covered by their existing setup with Amazon S3.

Question 4 of 61

A Veeam engineer creates a Scale-Out Backup Repository (SOBR) that uses AWS S3 as the Performance Tier. The backup job is configured to “Keep monthly full backups for: 12 months”. The engineer wants the backups to move to Glacier after 90 days.

What should the engineer do first to achieve this goal?

    Correct Answer: C

    To move backups to Glacier after 90 days, the engineer should add an Archive Tier with the appropriate Bucket from S3. The Archive Tier is designed to facilitate the movement of data to long-term storage solutions such as AWS S3 Glacier. This tier can be added to a Scale-Out Backup Repository that already uses AWS S3 for the Performance Tier without needing to add a Capacity Tier first.

Question 5 of 61

What describes an RPO?

    Correct Answer: D

    RPO stands for Recovery Point Objective. It defines the maximum acceptable amount of data loss measured in time. In other words, it describes the data loss tolerance of a Business Unit or Organization, confirming how much data a company can afford to lose in the event of a disruption.