An administrator is trying to configure a Placement Policy within VMware Aria Automation to ensure that provisioned resources are deployed across all compute hosts within a given region.
Where will the administrator configure this policy?
In VMware Aria Automation, Cloud Zones are used to define specific boundaries for deployment, such as regions, datacenters, or clusters within those datacenters. By configuring a Placement Policy within Cloud Zones, an administrator can control how and where the resources are deployed, ensuring that the provisioned resources are spread across all compute hosts within a given region or other defined criteria. This helps in achieving high availability, load balancing, and efficient use of resources.
An administrator configures a lease policy with the following settings:
Maximum lease (days): 10
Maximum total lease (days): 30
Grace period (days): 5
If a user does not respond to any emails, after how many days will the deployment be destroyed?
With the lease policy settings provided, the deployment will initially have a maximum lease of 10 days. If the user does not respond to any emails, the grace period of 5 days will come into effect after the lease expires, extending the total to 15 days. Since the maximum total lease is 30 days and considering the initial 10-day lease plus the 5-day grace period, if the user still does not respond, the deployment will be destroyed after the total of 35 days (30 days of total lease plus the 5-day grace period).
An administrator is preparing to deploy only VMware Aria Automation using the clustered deployment model.
Which three ports are required for the successful communication between VMware Aria Automation components? (Choose three.)
For VMware Aria Automation components to communicate successfully in a clustered deployment, certain ports must be open. Typically, port 443 (HTTPS) is required for secure web traffic, port 80 (HTTP) for web traffic redirection to HTTPS, and port 8008 might be used for internal communication purposes among VMware Aria Automation components.
An administrator is preparing to deploy VMware Aria Automation as a POC (Proof of Concept). The administrator must minimize on the number of resources being consumed by the POC.
Which type of deployment architecture should the administrator use?
For a Proof of Concept (POC) deployment where the goal is to minimize resource consumption, a stand-alone deployment architecture is most suitable. This architecture involves a single instance of VMware Aria Automation, which requires fewer resources compared to a clustered or distributed architecture, making it ideal for POC environments.
Which command should an administrator run to ensure data integrity before a snapshot or backup of a VMware Aria Automation appliance?
Before taking a snapshot or backup of a VMware Aria Automation appliance, it's crucial to ensure data integrity by stopping the services running on the appliance. Running the command /opt/scripts/svc-stop.sh achieves this by gracefully shutting down the VMware Aria Automation services, minimizing the risk of data corruption or inconsistency in the snapshot or backup.
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