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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 need to create the network infrastructure to deploy a highly available web application in the us-east1 and us-west1 regions. The application runs on Compute Engine instances, and it does not require the use of a database. You want to follow Google-recommended practices. What should you do?

Options:

A.

Create one VPC with one subnet in each region.

Create a regional network load balancer in each region with a static IP address.

Enable Cloud CDN on the load balancers.

Create an A record in Cloud DNS with both IP addresses for the load balancers.

B.

Create one VPC with one subnet in each region.

Create a global load balancer with a static IP address.

Enable Cloud CDN and Google Cloud Armor on the load balancer.

Create an A record using the IP address of the load balancer in Cloud DNS.

C.

Create one VPC in each region, and peer both VPCs.

Create a global load balancer.

Enable Cloud CDN on the load balancer.

Create a CNAME for the load balancer in Cloud DNS.

D.

Create one VPC with one subnet in each region.

Create an HTTP(S) load balancer with a static IP address.

Choose the standard tier for the network.

Enable Cloud CDN on the load balancer.

Create a CNAME record using the load balancer’s IP address in Cloud DNS.

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Question 2

Your company's web server administrator is migrating on-premises backend servers for an application to GCP. Libraries and configurations differ significantly across these backend servers. The migration to GCP will be lift-and-shift, and all requests to the servers will be served by a single network load balancer frontend. You want to use a GCP-native solution when possible.

How should you deploy this service in GCP?

Options:

A.

Create a managed instance group from one of the images of the on-premises servers, and link this instance group to a target pool behind your load balancer.

B.

Create a target pool, add all backend instances to this target pool, and deploy the target pool behind your load balancer.

C.

Deploy a third-party virtual appliance as frontend to these servers that will accommodate the significant differences between these backend servers.

D.

Use GCP's ECMP capability to load-balance traffic to the backend servers by installing multiple equal-priority static routes to the backend servers.

Question 3

You’ve received reports of latency between two application VMs which run in two different regions of your Google Cloud VPC network. There is typically about 8ms of latency, but now there is approximately 17ms of latency. You've eliminated application issues as a root cause, and you suspect that the latency may be a Google Cloud platform issue. You need to confirm this hypothesis using Google-recommended practices. What should you do?

Options:

A.

Q Use Network Intelligence Center Performance Dashboard to view the inter-region packet loss for your VPC.

B.

O Install and run tcpdump on both instances, and calculate the latency between the two instances by comparing the timestamps in the packet captures.

C.

Q Use Network Intelligence Center Performance Dashboard to view inter-region latency for the Google Cloud network.

D.

Q Use Network Intelligence Center Connectivity Tests, run a test between the two VMs, and review the inter-region latency in the test results.