Google Certified Associate Cloud Engineer Practice Tests

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Brief Introduction

Become GCP Google Certified Associate Cloud Engineer # Ace your ACE exam # Google Cloud Certification

Description

Pass your Associate Cloud Engineer exam on the first attempt and become GCP Google Certified Associate Cloud Engineer. All questions and answers in these practice exams have been carefully curated and updated to be fit for 2020 Associate Cloud Engineer Certification exam. Every question has a detailed explanation of why an option is correct and why the other options are wrong


The scenarios covered in this practice tests and the breadth and complexity of the questions here are indicative of what you see in the real exam. I update this course regularly to include new up-to-date content at no extra charge. If you have questions, raise them in Q&A - I offer full support, answering any questions you have 7 days a week.


This course is the highest rated course on this platform for Associate Cloud Engineer Certification Practice Tests !! Check Student Feedback before you buy the course. The feedback speaks for itself.


This course comes with a full 30 day money-back guarantee. If you are not completely satisfied with the course or your progress, please ask for a refund. 30 day refund policy applies. You literally can’t lose.


Note: This is not an exam dump. The questions in these practice tests do not show up in the real certification exam. The questions in these practice tests cover a wide range of GCP services that are relevant for the certification. You can use these questions to identify gaps in your knowledge and be better prepared for your certification exam.


Every question has a detailed explanation of why an option is correct and why the other options are wrong. Here is an example:


Q. Your company has several business-critical applications running on its on-premises data centre, which is already at full capacity, and you need to expand to Google Cloud Platform to handle traffic bursts. You want to virtual machine instances in both on-premises data centre and Google Cloud Compute Engine to communicate via their internal IP addresses. What should you do?

A. Create a new GCP project and a new VPC and make this a shared VPC with the on-premises network. Allow applications in the data centre to scale to Google Cloud on the shared VPC.

B. Create a new GCP project and a new VPC and enable VPC peering between the new VPC and networks in the data centre.

C. Add bastion hosts in GCP as well as on-premises network and set up a proxy tunnel between the bastion hosts in GCP and the bastion hosts in the on-premises network. Allow applications in the data centre to scale to Google Cloud through the proxy tunnel.

D. Create a new VPC in GCP with a non-overlapping IP range and configure Cloud VPN between the on-premises network and GCP. Allow applications in the data centre to scale to Google Cloud through the VPN tunnel.


Create a new GCP project and a new VPC and make this a shared VPC with the on-premises network. Allow applications in the data centre to scale to Google Cloud on the shared VPC. is not right.

Shared VPC allows an organization to connect resources from multiple projects to a common Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) network so that they can communicate with each other securely and efficiently using internal IPs from that network. When you use Shared VPC, you designate a project as a host project and attach one or more other service projects to it. This in no way helps us connect to our on-premises network.

Ref: https://cloud.google. com/vpc/docs/shared-vpc


Create a new GCP project and a new VPC and enable VPC peering between the new VPC and networks in the data centre. is not right.

Google Cloud VPC Network Peering allows internal IP address connectivity across two Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) networks regardless of whether they belong to the same project or the same organization. VPC Network Peering enables you to connect VPC networks so that workloads in different VPC networks can communicate internally. Traffic stays within Google's network and doesn't traverse the public internet. This doesn't help us connect to our on-premises network.

Ref: https://cloud.google. com/vpc/docs/vpc-peering


Add bastion hosts in GCP as well as on-premises network and set up a proxy tunnel between the bastion hosts in GCP and the bastion hosts in the on-premises network. Allow applications in the data centre to scale to Google Cloud through the proxy tunnel. is not right.

Bastion hosts provide an external facing point of entry into a network containing private network instances. Bastion hosts are primarily for end users so they can connect to an instance that does not have an external IP address through a bastion host.

Ref: https://cloud.google. com/compute/docs/instances/connecting-advanced


Create a new VPC in GCP with a non-overlapping IP range and configure Cloud VPN between the on-premises network and GCP. Allow applications in the data centre to scale to Google Cloud through the VPN tunnel. is the right answer.

Cloud VPN securely connects your on-premises network to your Google Cloud (GCP) Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) network through an IPsec VPN connection.

Ref: https://cloud.google. com/vpn/docs/concepts/overview


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$ 13.99
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Sarat Gutha
Udemy

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Sarat Gutha

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