Question 81
Case study -
This is a case study. Case studies are not timed separately. You can use as much exam time as you would like to complete each case. However, there may be additional case studies and sections on this exam. You must manage your time to ensure that you are able to complete all questions included on this exam in the time provided.
To answer the questions included in a case study, you will need to reference information that is provided in the case study. Case studies might contain exhibits and other resources that provide more information about the scenario that is described in the case study. Each question is independent of the other questions in this case study.
At the end of this case study, a review screen will appear. This screen allows you to review your answers and to make changes before you move to the next section of the exam. After you begin a new section, you cannot return to this section.
To start the case study -
To display the first question in this case study, click the Next button. Use the buttons in the left pane to explore the content of the case study before you answer the questions. Clicking these buttons displays information such as business requirements, existing environment, and problem statements. If the case study has an
All Information tab, note that the information displayed is identical to the information displayed on the subsequent tabs. When you are ready to answer a question, click the Question button to return to the question.
Company Overview -
HipLocal is a community application designed to facilitate communication between people in close proximity. It is used for event planning and organizing sporting events, and for businesses to connect with their local communities. HipLocal launched recently in a few neighborhoods in Dallas and is rapidly growing into a global phenomenon. Its unique style of hyper-local community communication and business outreach is in demand around the world.
Executive Statement -
We are the number one local community app; it's time to take our local community services global. Our venture capital investors want to see rapid growth and the same great experience for new local and virtual communities that come online, whether their members are 10 or 10000 miles away from each other.
Solution Concept -
HipLocal wants to expand their existing service, with updated functionality, in new regions to better serve their global customers. They want to hire and train a new team to support these regions in their time zones. They will need to ensure that the application scales smoothly and provides clear uptime data.
Existing Technical Environment -
HipLocal's environment is a mix of on-premises hardware and infrastructure running in Google Cloud Platform. The HipLocal team understands their application well, but has limited experience in global scale applications. Their existing technical environment is as follows:
* Existing APIs run on Compute Engine virtual machine instances hosted in GCP.
* State is stored in a single instance MySQL database in GCP.
* Data is exported to an on-premises Teradata/Vertica data warehouse.
* Data analytics is performed in an on-premises Hadoop environment.
* The application has no logging.
* There are basic indicators of uptime; alerts are frequently fired when the APIs are unresponsive.
Business Requirements -
HipLocal's investors want to expand their footprint and support the increase in demand they are seeing. Their requirements are:
* Expand availability of the application to new regions.
* Increase the number of concurrent users that can be supported.
* Ensure a consistent experience for users when they travel to different regions.
* Obtain user activity metrics to better understand how to monetize their product.
* Ensure compliance with regulations in the new regions (for example, GDPR).
* Reduce infrastructure management time and cost.
* Adopt the Google-recommended practices for cloud computing.
Technical Requirements -
* The application and backend must provide usage metrics and monitoring.
* APIs require strong authentication and authorization.
* Logging must be increased, and data should be stored in a cloud analytics platform.
* Move to serverless architecture to facilitate elastic scaling.
* Provide authorized access to internal apps in a secure manner.
HipLocal is configuring their access controls.
Which firewall configuration should they implement?
A. Block all traffic on port 443.
B. Allow all traffic into the network.
C. Allow traffic on port 443 for a specific tag.
D. Allow all traffic on port 443 into the network.
Question 82
Case study -
This is a case study. Case studies are not timed separately. You can use as much exam time as you would like to complete each case. However, there may be additional case studies and sections on this exam. You must manage your time to ensure that you are able to complete all questions included on this exam in the time provided.
To answer the questions included in a case study, you will need to reference information that is provided in the case study. Case studies might contain exhibits and other resources that provide more information about the scenario that is described in the case study. Each question is independent of the other questions in this case study.
At the end of this case study, a review screen will appear. This screen allows you to review your answers and to make changes before you move to the next section of the exam. After you begin a new section, you cannot return to this section.
To start the case study -
To display the first question in this case study, click the Next button. Use the buttons in the left pane to explore the content of the case study before you answer the questions. Clicking these buttons displays information such as business requirements, existing environment, and problem statements. If the case study has an
All Information tab, note that the information displayed is identical to the information displayed on the subsequent tabs. When you are ready to answer a question, click the Question button to return to the question.
Company Overview -
HipLocal is a community application designed to facilitate communication between people in close proximity. It is used for event planning and organizing sporting events, and for businesses to connect with their local communities. HipLocal launched recently in a few neighborhoods in Dallas and is rapidly growing into a global phenomenon. Its unique style of hyper-local community communication and business outreach is in demand around the world.
Executive Statement -
We are the number one local community app; it's time to take our local community services global. Our venture capital investors want to see rapid growth and the same great experience for new local and virtual communities that come online, whether their members are 10 or 10000 miles away from each other.
Solution Concept -
HipLocal wants to expand their existing service, with updated functionality, in new regions to better serve their global customers. They want to hire and train a new team to support these regions in their time zones. They will need to ensure that the application scales smoothly and provides clear uptime data.
Existing Technical Environment -
HipLocal's environment is a mix of on-premises hardware and infrastructure running in Google Cloud Platform. The HipLocal team understands their application well, but has limited experience in global scale applications. Their existing technical environment is as follows:
* Existing APIs run on Compute Engine virtual machine instances hosted in GCP.
* State is stored in a single instance MySQL database in GCP.
* Data is exported to an on-premises Teradata/Vertica data warehouse.
* Data analytics is performed in an on-premises Hadoop environment.
* The application has no logging.
* There are basic indicators of uptime; alerts are frequently fired when the APIs are unresponsive.
Business Requirements -
HipLocal's investors want to expand their footprint and support the increase in demand they are seeing. Their requirements are:
* Expand availability of the application to new regions.
* Increase the number of concurrent users that can be supported.
* Ensure a consistent experience for users when they travel to different regions.
* Obtain user activity metrics to better understand how to monetize their product.
* Ensure compliance with regulations in the new regions (for example, GDPR).
* Reduce infrastructure management time and cost.
* Adopt the Google-recommended practices for cloud computing.
Technical Requirements -
* The application and backend must provide usage metrics and monitoring.
* APIs require strong authentication and authorization.
* Logging must be increased, and data should be stored in a cloud analytics platform.
* Move to serverless architecture to facilitate elastic scaling.
* Provide authorized access to internal apps in a secure manner.
HipLocal's data science team wants to analyze user reviews.
How should they prepare the data?
A. Use the Cloud Data Loss Prevention API for redaction of the review dataset.
B. Use the Cloud Data Loss Prevention API for de-identification of the review dataset.
C. Use the Cloud Natural Language Processing API for redaction of the review dataset.
D. Use the Cloud Natural Language Processing API for de-identification of the review dataset.
Question 83
Case study -
This is a case study. Case studies are not timed separately. You can use as much exam time as you would like to complete each case. However, there may be additional case studies and sections on this exam. You must manage your time to ensure that you are able to complete all questions included on this exam in the time provided.
To answer the questions included in a case study, you will need to reference information that is provided in the case study. Case studies might contain exhibits and other resources that provide more information about the scenario that is described in the case study. Each question is independent of the other questions in this case study.
At the end of this case study, a review screen will appear. This screen allows you to review your answers and to make changes before you move to the next section of the exam. After you begin a new section, you cannot return to this section.
To start the case study -
To display the first question in this case study, click the Next button. Use the buttons in the left pane to explore the content of the case study before you answer the questions. Clicking these buttons displays information such as business requirements, existing environment, and problem statements. If the case study has an
All Information tab, note that the information displayed is identical to the information displayed on the subsequent tabs. When you are ready to answer a question, click the Question button to return to the question.
Company Overview -
HipLocal is a community application designed to facilitate communication between people in close proximity. It is used for event planning and organizing sporting events, and for businesses to connect with their local communities. HipLocal launched recently in a few neighborhoods in Dallas and is rapidly growing into a global phenomenon. Its unique style of hyper-local community communication and business outreach is in demand around the world.
Executive Statement -
We are the number one local community app; it's time to take our local community services global. Our venture capital investors want to see rapid growth and the same great experience for new local and virtual communities that come online, whether their members are 10 or 10000 miles away from each other.
Solution Concept -
HipLocal wants to expand their existing service, with updated functionality, in new regions to better serve their global customers. They want to hire and train a new team to support these regions in their time zones. They will need to ensure that the application scales smoothly and provides clear uptime data.
Existing Technical Environment -
HipLocal's environment is a mix of on-premises hardware and infrastructure running in Google Cloud Platform. The HipLocal team understands their application well, but has limited experience in global scale applications. Their existing technical environment is as follows:
* Existing APIs run on Compute Engine virtual machine instances hosted in GCP.
* State is stored in a single instance MySQL database in GCP.
* Data is exported to an on-premises Teradata/Vertica data warehouse.
* Data analytics is performed in an on-premises Hadoop environment.
* The application has no logging.
* There are basic indicators of uptime; alerts are frequently fired when the APIs are unresponsive.
Business Requirements -
HipLocal's investors want to expand their footprint and support the increase in demand they are seeing. Their requirements are:
* Expand availability of the application to new regions.
* Increase the number of concurrent users that can be supported.
* Ensure a consistent experience for users when they travel to different regions.
* Obtain user activity metrics to better understand how to monetize their product.
* Ensure compliance with regulations in the new regions (for example, GDPR).
* Reduce infrastructure management time and cost.
* Adopt the Google-recommended practices for cloud computing.
Technical Requirements -
* The application and backend must provide usage metrics and monitoring.
* APIs require strong authentication and authorization.
* Logging must be increased, and data should be stored in a cloud analytics platform.
* Move to serverless architecture to facilitate elastic scaling.
* Provide authorized access to internal apps in a secure manner.
In order for HipLocal to store application state and meet their stated business requirements, which database service should they migrate to?
A. Cloud Spanner
B. Cloud Datastore
C. Cloud Memorystore as a cache
D. Separate Cloud SQL clusters for each region
Question 84
You have an application deployed in production. When a new version is deployed, you want to ensure that all production traffic is routed to the new version of your application. You also want to keep the previous version deployed so that you can revert to it if there is an issue with the new version.
Which deployment strategy should you use?
A. Blue/green deployment
B. Canary deployment
C. Rolling deployment
D. Recreate deployment
Question 85
You are porting an existing Apache/MySQL/PHP application stack from a single machine to Google
Kubernetes Engine. You need to determine how to containerize the application. Your approach should follow Google-recommended best practices for availability.
What should you do?
A. Package each component in a separate container. Implement readiness and liveness probes.
B. Package the application in a single container. Use a process management tool to manage each component.
C. Package each component in a separate container. Use a script to orchestrate the launch of the components.
D. Package the application in a single container. Use a bash script as an entrypoint to the container, and then spawn each component as a background job.
Question 86
You are developing an application that will be launched on Compute Engine instances into multiple distinct projects, each corresponding to the environments in your software development process (development, QA, staging, and production). The instances in each project have the same application code but a different configuration. During deployment, each instance should receive the application's configuration based on the environment it serves. You want to minimize the number of steps to configure this flow. What should you do?
A. When creating your instances, configure a startup script using the gcloud command to determine the project name that indicates the correct environment.
B. In each project, configure a metadata key "environment" whose value is the environment it serves. Use your deployment tool to query the instance metadata and configure the application based on the "environment" value.
C. Deploy your chosen deployment tool on an instance in each project. Use a deployment job to retrieve the appropriate configuration file from your version control system, and apply the configuration when deploying the application on each instance.
D. During each instance launch, configure an instance custom-metadata key named "environment" whose value is the environment the instance serves. Use your deployment tool to query the instance metadata, and configure the application based on the "environment" value.
Question 87
You are developing an ecommerce application that stores customer, order, and inventory data as relational tables inside Cloud Spanner. During a recent load test, you discover that Spanner performance is not scaling linearly as expected. Which of the following is the cause?
A. The use of 64-bit numeric types for 32-bit numbers.
B. The use of the STRING data type for arbitrary-precision values.
C. The use of Version 1 UUIDs as primary keys that increase monotonically.
D. The use of LIKE instead of STARTS_WITH keyword for parameterized SQL queries.
Question 88
You are developing an application that reads credit card data from a Pub/Sub subscription. You have written code and completed unit testing. You need to test the
Pub/Sub integration before deploying to Google Cloud. What should you do?
A. Create a service to publish messages, and deploy the Pub/Sub emulator. Generate random content in the publishing service, and publish to the emulator.
B. Create a service to publish messages to your application. Collect the messages from Pub/Sub in production, and replay them through the publishing service.
C. Create a service to publish messages, and deploy the Pub/Sub emulator. Collect the messages from Pub/Sub in production, and publish them to the emulator.
D. Create a service to publish messages, and deploy the Pub/Sub emulator. Publish a standard set of testing messages from the publishing service to the emulator.
Question 89
You are designing an application that will subscribe to and receive messages from a single Pub/Sub topic and insert corresponding rows into a database. Your application runs on Linux and leverages preemptible virtual machines to reduce costs. You need to create a shutdown script that will initiate a graceful shutdown.
What should you do?
A. Write a shutdown script that uses inter-process signals to notify the application process to disconnect from the database.
B. Write a shutdown script that broadcasts a message to all signed-in users that the Compute Engine instance is going down and instructs them to save current work and sign out.
C. Write a shutdown script that writes a file in a location that is being polled by the application once every five minutes. After the file is read, the application disconnects from the database.
D. Write a shutdown script that publishes a message to the Pub/Sub topic announcing that a shutdown is in progress. After the application reads the message, it disconnects from the database.
Question 90
You work for a web development team at a small startup. Your team is developing a Node.js application using Google Cloud services, including Cloud Storage and Cloud Build. The team uses a Git repository for version control. Your manager calls you over the weekend and instructs you to make an emergency update to one of the company's websites, and you're the only developer available. You need to access Google Cloud to make the update, but you don't have your work laptop. You are not allowed to store source code locally on a non-corporate computer. How should you set up your developer environment?
A. Use a text editor and the Git command line to send your source code updates as pull requests from a public computer.
B. Use a text editor and the Git command line to send your source code updates as pull requests from a virtual machine running on a public computer.
C. Use Cloud Shell and the built-in code editor for development. Send your source code updates as pull requests.
D. Use a Cloud Storage bucket to store the source code that you need to edit. Mount the bucket to a public computer as a drive, and use a code editor to update the code. Turn on versioning for the bucket, and point it to the team's Git repository.