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AZ-304 Exam - Question 163


HOTSPOT -

Your company deploys an Azure App Service Web App.

During testing the application fails under load. The application cannot handle more than 100 concurrent user sessions. You enable the Always On feature. You also configure auto-scaling to increase instance counts from two to 10 based on HTTP queue length.

You need to improve the performance of the application.

Which solution should you use for each application scenario? To answer, select the appropriate options in the answer area.

NOTE: Each correct selection is worth one point.

Hot Area:

Exam AZ-304 Question 163
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Correct Answer:
Exam AZ-304 Question 163

Box 1: Content Delivery Network -

A content delivery network (CDN) is a distributed network of servers that can efficiently deliver web content to users. CDNs store cached content on edge servers in point-of-presence (POP) locations that are close to end users, to minimize latency.

Azure Content Delivery Network (CDN) offers developers a global solution for rapidly delivering high-bandwidth content to users by caching their content at strategically placed physical nodes across the world. Azure CDN can also accelerate dynamic content, which cannot be cached, by leveraging various network optimizations using CDN POPs. For example, route optimization to bypass Border Gateway Protocol (BGP).

Box 2: Azure Redis Cache -

Azure Cache for Redis is based on the popular software Redis. It is typically used as a cache to improve the performance and scalability of systems that rely heavily on backend data-stores. Performance is improved by temporarily copying frequently accessed data to fast storage located close to the application. With

Azure Cache for Redis, this fast storage is located in-memory with Azure Cache for Redis instead of being loaded from disk by a database.

Reference:

https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/azure-cache-for-redis/cache-overview

Discussion

9 comments
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gcpjay
Dec 13, 2020

Given answers are correct.

kopper2019
Dec 27, 2020

given answer is correct

vladodias
Feb 2, 2021

Given answers seems correct...

milind8451
Jan 25, 2021

Answers are correct.

Anonymous
Sep 20, 2021

came in exam on 20-sep-21, I passed, I choose given one

c1234567
Jun 16, 2021

This is correct.

syu31svc
Oct 5, 2021

This is correct CDN for worldwide distribution and Redis for caching content

pikk
Sep 11, 2021

aswer is corct

andyR
Dec 2, 2020

Azure Traffic Manager CDN

Ziggybooboo
Dec 5, 2020

Traffic Manager does not store data, it directs to a region using DNS

andyR
Dec 6, 2020

was thinking TM could direct users based on closest store / region

sejalo
Feb 12, 2021

if u think TM could be the ans, pls write your own justification with some link else it won't help anyone in the discussion. I never come across any doc saying that TM can direct to closer region. Azure Traffic Manager is a DNS-based traffic load balancer

exam67
Feb 20, 2021

I agree that TM is not a correct answer for this question. However AndyR's point on Traffic Manager is not wrong. TM is DNS based and can be used to direct traffic to the 'closest' region when "Performance" routing is used. For more see https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/traffic-manager/traffic-manager-routing-methods#performance

3nteng
Mar 20, 2021

question is about storage. TM redirects traffic, it doesn't store contents. CDN is more appropriate answer as it is a distributed network of servers that serve contents

3nteng
Mar 20, 2021

question is about storage. TM redirects traffic, it doesn't store contents. CDN is more appropriate answer as it is a distributed network of servers that serve contents

exam67
Feb 20, 2021

I agree that TM is not a correct answer for this question. However AndyR's point on Traffic Manager is not wrong. TM is DNS based and can be used to direct traffic to the 'closest' region when "Performance" routing is used. For more see https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/traffic-manager/traffic-manager-routing-methods#performance

3nteng
Mar 20, 2021

question is about storage. TM redirects traffic, it doesn't store contents. CDN is more appropriate answer as it is a distributed network of servers that serve contents

3nteng
Mar 20, 2021

question is about storage. TM redirects traffic, it doesn't store contents. CDN is more appropriate answer as it is a distributed network of servers that serve contents

sejalo
Feb 12, 2021

if u think TM could be the ans, pls write your own justification with some link else it won't help anyone in the discussion. I never come across any doc saying that TM can direct to closer region. Azure Traffic Manager is a DNS-based traffic load balancer

exam67
Feb 20, 2021

I agree that TM is not a correct answer for this question. However AndyR's point on Traffic Manager is not wrong. TM is DNS based and can be used to direct traffic to the 'closest' region when "Performance" routing is used. For more see https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/traffic-manager/traffic-manager-routing-methods#performance

3nteng
Mar 20, 2021

question is about storage. TM redirects traffic, it doesn't store contents. CDN is more appropriate answer as it is a distributed network of servers that serve contents

3nteng
Mar 20, 2021

question is about storage. TM redirects traffic, it doesn't store contents. CDN is more appropriate answer as it is a distributed network of servers that serve contents

exam67
Feb 20, 2021

I agree that TM is not a correct answer for this question. However AndyR's point on Traffic Manager is not wrong. TM is DNS based and can be used to direct traffic to the 'closest' region when "Performance" routing is used. For more see https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/traffic-manager/traffic-manager-routing-methods#performance

3nteng
Mar 20, 2021

question is about storage. TM redirects traffic, it doesn't store contents. CDN is more appropriate answer as it is a distributed network of servers that serve contents

3nteng
Mar 20, 2021

question is about storage. TM redirects traffic, it doesn't store contents. CDN is more appropriate answer as it is a distributed network of servers that serve contents

andyR
Dec 6, 2020

was thinking TM could direct users based on closest store / region

sejalo
Feb 12, 2021

if u think TM could be the ans, pls write your own justification with some link else it won't help anyone in the discussion. I never come across any doc saying that TM can direct to closer region. Azure Traffic Manager is a DNS-based traffic load balancer

exam67
Feb 20, 2021

I agree that TM is not a correct answer for this question. However AndyR's point on Traffic Manager is not wrong. TM is DNS based and can be used to direct traffic to the 'closest' region when "Performance" routing is used. For more see https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/traffic-manager/traffic-manager-routing-methods#performance

3nteng
Mar 20, 2021

question is about storage. TM redirects traffic, it doesn't store contents. CDN is more appropriate answer as it is a distributed network of servers that serve contents

3nteng
Mar 20, 2021

question is about storage. TM redirects traffic, it doesn't store contents. CDN is more appropriate answer as it is a distributed network of servers that serve contents

exam67
Feb 20, 2021

I agree that TM is not a correct answer for this question. However AndyR's point on Traffic Manager is not wrong. TM is DNS based and can be used to direct traffic to the 'closest' region when "Performance" routing is used. For more see https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/traffic-manager/traffic-manager-routing-methods#performance

3nteng
Mar 20, 2021

question is about storage. TM redirects traffic, it doesn't store contents. CDN is more appropriate answer as it is a distributed network of servers that serve contents

3nteng
Mar 20, 2021

question is about storage. TM redirects traffic, it doesn't store contents. CDN is more appropriate answer as it is a distributed network of servers that serve contents

Name1s4Discussion
Dec 11, 2020

People like you ruin this site. Stop posting dumb shit if you don't know. If you don't know the answer to this you shouldn't even be here. This cert won't help you if you don't even know the most basic stuff.

andyR
Dec 12, 2020

Thanks for patrolling the comments on 301 also: Name1s4Discussion 1 month, 3 weeks ago Best advice anytime you see this cloudcuckooland guy comment ignore it. He has no idea what he's talking about

xaccan
Feb 4, 2021

andyR, the given answers are correct, Azure traffic manager is false.

xaccan
Feb 4, 2021

andyR, the given answers are correct, Azure traffic manager is false.

andyR
Dec 12, 2020

Thanks for patrolling the comments on 301 also: Name1s4Discussion 1 month, 3 weeks ago Best advice anytime you see this cloudcuckooland guy comment ignore it. He has no idea what he's talking about

xaccan
Feb 4, 2021

andyR, the given answers are correct, Azure traffic manager is false.

Bhuvy
Jan 4, 2021

@andyR If you dont know it for sure, then dont comment it as if you know it. It wastes other's time. Must appreciated thanks.

sejalo
Feb 12, 2021

Agreed with u, people should read basic doc for such easy question before posting comment

xaccan
Feb 4, 2021

andyR, the given answers are correct, Azure traffic manager is false.

sejalo
Feb 12, 2021

if u think TM could be the ans, pls write your own justification with some link else it won't help anyone in the discussion. I never come across any doc saying that TM can direct to closer region. Azure Traffic Manager is a DNS-based traffic load balancer

exam67
Feb 20, 2021

I agree that TM is not a correct answer for this question. However AndyR's point on Traffic Manager is not wrong. TM is DNS based and can be used to direct traffic to the 'closest' region when "Performance" routing is used. For more see https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/traffic-manager/traffic-manager-routing-methods#performance

3nteng
Mar 20, 2021

question is about storage. TM redirects traffic, it doesn't store contents. CDN is more appropriate answer as it is a distributed network of servers that serve contents

3nteng
Mar 20, 2021

question is about storage. TM redirects traffic, it doesn't store contents. CDN is more appropriate answer as it is a distributed network of servers that serve contents

sejalo
Feb 12, 2021

Agreed with u, people should read basic doc for such easy question before posting comment

exam67
Feb 20, 2021

I agree that TM is not a correct answer for this question. However AndyR's point on Traffic Manager is not wrong. TM is DNS based and can be used to direct traffic to the 'closest' region when "Performance" routing is used. For more see https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/traffic-manager/traffic-manager-routing-methods#performance

3nteng
Mar 20, 2021

question is about storage. TM redirects traffic, it doesn't store contents. CDN is more appropriate answer as it is a distributed network of servers that serve contents

3nteng
Mar 20, 2021

question is about storage. TM redirects traffic, it doesn't store contents. CDN is more appropriate answer as it is a distributed network of servers that serve contents

heamgu
Jul 7, 2021

I'm pretty sure you are going to think twice before comment again.