HOTSPOT
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For each of the following statements, select Yes if the statement is true. Otherwise, select No.
NOTE: Each correct selection is worth one point.
HOTSPOT
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For each of the following statements, select Yes if the statement is true. Otherwise, select No.
NOTE: Each correct selection is worth one point.
The answer is YYY Yes, Azure Arc can manage physical servers that run Linux. It extends Azure management capabilities to on-premises and multi-cloud environments, allowing you to manage servers, whether they are in Azure or outside of Azure. Yes, Azure Arc can manage Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS) clusters at scale. It allows you to extend Azure management to AKS clusters that are not running in Azure, providing centralized management for Kubernetes clusters across different environments. Yes, Azure Arc can manage a third-party database solution hosted outside of Azure. It allows you to bring databases running on physical servers or in other cloud environments under Azure management using Azure Arc.
Y.Y.Y is correct
The answer is YYY, check out the Azure Arc overview: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/azure-arc/overview
YYN is correct I think.
Y. Y .Y Servers: Manage Windows and Linux physical servers and virtual machines hosted outside of Azure. Kubernetes clusters: Attach and configure Kubernetes clusters running anywhere, with multiple supported distributions. Azure data services: Run Azure data services on-premises, at the edge, and in public clouds using Kubernetes and the infrastructure of your choice. SQL Managed Instance and PostgreSQL (preview) services are currently available. SQL Server: Extend Azure services to SQL Server instances hosted outside of Azure.
So the 3rd one should be N? Because Oracle DB doesn't seem to be supported, which is a 3rd party service. SQL Server is from Microsoft and PostgreSQL is open source so not really what one calls a 3rd party.
Kind of confused about this one, what does it mean when it says third party? Is the third party bit referring to the SQL software being used or the cloud provider hosting? The documentation says it supports database management, but it seems this is only supporting two specific types of "data services" (SQL managed instance and PostgreSQL), so I would probably go with YYN to take the answer with the least assumption. https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/azure-arc/data/overview
YYN First Party DBs not 3rd Party like Oracle
All is yes
But there is a statement : Manage virtual machines, Kubernetes clusters, and databases as if they are running in Azure. As stays in this doc: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/azure-arc/overview#:~:text=Manage%20virtual%20machines%2C%20Kubernetes%20clusters%2C%20and%20databases%20as%20if%20they%20are%20running%20in%20Azure. so maybe there is 3x Y
NNY is correct "Currently, Azure Arc allows you to manage the following resource types hosted outside of Azure: Servers: Manage Windows and Linux physical servers and virtual machines hosted outside of Azure. Kubernetes clusters: Attach and configure Kubernetes clusters running anywhere, with multiple supported distributions. SQL Server: Extend Azure services to SQL Server instances hosted outside of Azure." https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/azure-arc/overview
I got confused when I put the answers. They are correct. YYN