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Professional-Cloud-Network-Engineer Exam Dumps : Google Cloud Certified - Professional Cloud Network Engineer

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Google Cloud Certified - Professional Cloud Network Engineer Questions and Answers

Question 1

You work for a university that is migrating to Google Cloud.

These are the cloud requirements:

On-premises connectivity with 10 Gbps

Lowest latency access to the cloud

Centralized Networking Administration Team

New departments are asking for on-premises connectivity to their projects. You want to deploy the most cost-efficient interconnect solution for connecting the campus to Google Cloud.

What should you do?

Options:

A.

Use Shared VPC, and deploy the VLAN attachments and Dedicated Interconnect in the host project.

B.

Use Shared VPC, and deploy the VLAN attachments in the service projects. Connect the VLAN attachment to the Shared VPC's host project.

C.

Use standalone projects, and deploy the VLAN attachments in the individual projects. Connect the VLAN attachment to the standalone projects' Dedicated Interconnects.

D.

Use standalone projects and deploy the VLAN attachments and Dedicated Interconnects in each of the individual projects.

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Question 2

Your organization is migrating workloads from AWS to Google Cloud. Because a particularly critical workload will take longer to migrate, you need to set up Google Cloud CDN and point it to the existing application at AWS. What should you do?

Options:

A.

Create a hybrid NEG that points to the existing IP of the application.

• Map the NEG to a passthrough Network Load Balancer as a target pool.

• Enable Cloud CDN on the target pool.

B.

Create an internet NEG that points to the existing FQDN of the application.

• Map the NEG to an Application Load Balancer as a backend service.

• Enable Cloud CDN on the backend service.

C.

Create a hybrid NEG that points to the existing IP of the application.

• Map the NEG to an Application Load Balancer as a backend service.

• Enable Cloud CDN on the backend service.

D.

Create an internet NEG that points to the existing FQDN of the application.

• Map the NEG to a passthrough Network Load Balancer as a backend service.

• Enable Cloud CDN on the backend service.

Question 3

Your company has recently installed a Cloud VPN tunnel between your on-premises data center and your Google Cloud Virtual Private Cloud (VPC). You need to configure access to the Cloud Functions API for your on-premises servers. The configuration must meet the following requirements:

Certain data must stay in the project where it is stored and not be exfiltrated to other projects.

Traffic from servers in your data center with RFC 1918 addresses do not use the internet to access Google Cloud APIs.

All DNS resolution must be done on-premises.

The solution should only provide access to APIs that are compatible with VPC Service Controls.

What should you do?

Options:

A.

Create an A record for private.googleapis.com using the 199.36.153.8/30 address range.

Create a CNAME record for *.googleapis.com that points to the A record.

Configure your on-premises routers to use the Cloud VPN tunnel as the next hop for the addresses you used in the A record.

Remove the default internet gateway from the VPC where your Cloud VPN tunnel terminates.

B.

Create an A record for restricted.googleapis.com using the 199.36.153.4/30 address range.

Create a CNAME record for *.googleapis.com that points to the A record.

Configure your on-premises routers to use the Cloud VPN tunnel as the next hop for the addresses you used in the A record.

Configure your on-premises firewalls to allow traffic to the restricted.googleapis.com addresses.

C.

Create an A record for restricted.googleapis.com using the 199.36.153.4/30 address range.

Create a CNAME record for *.googleapis.com that points to the A record.

Configure your on-premises routers to use the Cloud VPN tunnel as the next hop for the addresses you used in the A record.

Remove the default internet gateway from the VPC where your Cloud VPN tunnel terminates.

D.

Create an A record for private.googleapis.com using the 199.36.153.8/30 address range.

Create a CNAME record for *.googleapis.com that points to the A record.

Configure your on-premises routers to use the Cloud VPN tunnel as the next hop for the addresses you used in the A record.

Configure your on-premises firewalls to allow traffic to the private.googleapis.com addresses.