Azure Virtual Networks Review Practice Exam 2024.
You are configuring your network environment in Microsoft Azure. You create a virtual network.
... [Show More] Next, you create a single subnet using 172.16.10.0/24. You opt to deploy a load balancer on the first available IP address in the subnet. Which IP address should you use for the load balancer? - CORRECT ANSWER 172.16.10.4
You have several VMs in Microsoft Azure. All the VMs are configured with the default IP addressing solution. A VM named VM1 is assigned the 172.16.10.100 IP address. You stop VM1 to perform some disk maintenance activities. During that time, another administrator deploys a new VM named VM25. Later, after VM1 comes back online, you notice that its IP address changed. Now, VM25 is assigned the 172.16.10.100 IP address. You need to ensure that VM1 maintains the IP address of 172.16.10.100. All other VMs should have their IP addresses automatically allocated. What should you do? - CORRECT ANSWER Stop VM25 and Configure VM1 with a static IP address of 172.16.10.100.
You are planning to configure networking in Microsoft Azure. Your company has a new Microsoft Azure presence with the following network characteristics:
1 Virtual Network
1 subnet using 192.168.0.0/23 (does not have existing resources)
Your on-premises data center has the following network characteristics:
10 subnets using 192.168.1.0/24 through 192.168.10.0/24.
The company intends to use 192.168.1.0/24 on-premises and 192.168.0.0/24 in Azure. You need to update your company's environment to enable the needed functionality. What should you do? - CORRECT ANSWER Delete 192.168.0.0/23 from Azure.
Create a subnet for 192.168.0.0/24 in Azure.
You have a hybrid environment with some resources in an on-premises data center and some resources in Microsoft Azure. Your on-premises data center is connected to Azure through a site-to-site VPN. You deploy default Windows Server 2016 VMs in Azure. You configure them to use your on-premises DNS servers. In your on-premises environment, all domain controllers are also DNS servers. Several months later, you notice that some of the VMs in Azure are not resolving in DNS. You troubleshoot and find that all the name resolution issues are tied to the first VMs you deployed in Azure. VMs that were recently [Show Less]