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You have an Azure SQL database named DB1.

You need to ensure that DB1 will support automatic failover without data loss if a datacenter fails. The solution must minimize costs. Which deployment option and pricing tier should you configure?

A.
Azure SQL Database Hyperscale
A.
Azure SQL Database Hyperscale
Answers
B.
Azure SQL Database managed instance General Purpose
B.
Azure SQL Database managed instance General Purpose
Answers
C.
Azure SQL Database Premium
C.
Azure SQL Database Premium
Answers
D.
Azure SQL Database Basic
D.
Azure SQL Database Basic
Answers
Suggested answer: C

Explanation:

By default, the cluster of nodes for the premium availability model is created in the same datacenter.With the introduction of Azure Availability Zones, SQL Database can place different replicas of theBusiness Critical database to different availability zones in the same region. To eliminate a singlepoint of failure, the control ring is also duplicated across multiple zones as three gateway rings (GW).The routing to a specific gateway ring is controlled by Azure Traffic Manager (ATM). Because the zoneredundant configuration in the Premium or Business Critical service tiers does not create additionaldatabase redundancy, you can enable it at no extra cost. By selecting a zone redundant configuration,you can make your Premium or Business Critical databases resilient to a much larger set of failures,including catastrophic datacenter outages, without any changes to the application logic. You can alsoconvert any existing Premium or Business Critical databases or pools to the zone redundantconfiguration.

Note: This question is part of a series of questions that present the same scenario. Each question in the series contains a unique solution that might meet the stated goals. Some question sets might have more than one correct solution, while others might not have a correct solution.

After you answer a question in this section, you will NOT be able to return to it. As a result, these questions will not appear in the review screen.

You have an Azure SQL database named Sales.

You need to implement disaster recovery for Sales to meet the following requirements:

During normal operations, provide at least two readable copies of Sales.

Ensure that Sales remains available if a datacenter fails.

Solution: You deploy an Azure SQL database that uses the General Purpose service tier and geo-replication.

Does this meet the goal?

A.
Yes
A.
Yes
Answers
B.
No
B.
No
Answers
Suggested answer: B

Explanation:

Instead deploy an Azure SQL database that uses the Business Critical service tier and Availability Zones. Note: Premium and Business Critical service tiers leverage the Premium availability model, which integrates compute resources (sqlservr.exe process) and storage (locally attached SSD) on a single node. High availability is achieved by replicating both compute and storage to additional nodes creating a three to four-node cluster.

By default, the cluster of nodes for the premium availability model is created in the same datacenter. With the introduction of Azure Availability Zones, SQL Database can place different replicas of the Business Critical database to different availability zones in the same region. To eliminate a single point of failure, the control ring is also duplicated across multiple zones as three gateway rings (GW).

Reference:

https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/azure-sql/database/high-availability-sla

Note: This question is part of a series of questions that present the same scenario. Each question in the series contains a unique solution that might meet the stated goals. Some question sets might have more than one correct solution, while others might not have a correct solution.

After you answer a question in this section, you will NOT be able to return to it. As a result, these questions will not appear in the review screen.

You have an Azure SQL database named Sales.

You need to implement disaster recovery for Sales to meet the following requirements:

During normal operations, provide at least two readable copies of Sales.

Ensure that Sales remains available if a datacenter fails.

Solution: You deploy an Azure SQL database that uses the Business Critical service tier and Availability Zones.

Does this meet the goal?

A.
Yes
A.
Yes
Answers
B.
No
B.
No
Answers
Suggested answer: A

Explanation:

Premium and Business Critical service tiers leverage the Premium availability model, which integrates compute resources (sqlservr.exe process) and storage (locally attached SSD) on a single node. High availability is achieved by replicating both compute and storage to additional nodes creating a three to four-node cluster.

By default, the cluster of nodes for the premium availability model is created in the same datacenter. With the introduction of Azure Availability Zones, SQL Database can place different replicas of the Business Critical database to different availability zones in the same region. To eliminate a single point of failure, the control ring is also duplicated across multiple zones as three gateway rings (GW).

Reference:

https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/azure-sql/database/high-availability-sla

Note: This question is part of a series of questions that present the same scenario. Each question in the series contains a unique solution that might meet the stated goals. Some question sets might have more than one correct solution, while others might not have a correct solution.

After you answer a question in this section, you will NOT be able to return to it. As a result, these questions will not appear in the review screen.

You have an Azure SQL database named Sales.

You need to implement disaster recovery for Sales to meet the following requirements:

During normal operations, provide at least two readable copies of Sales.

Ensure that Sales remains available if a datacenter fails.

Solution: You deploy an Azure SQL database that uses the General Purpose service tier and failover groups.

Does this meet the goal?

A.
Yes
A.
Yes
Answers
B.
No
B.
No
Answers
Suggested answer: B

Explanation:

Instead deploy an Azure SQL database that uses the Business Critical service tier and Availability Zones. Note: Premium and Business Critical service tiers leverage the Premium availability model, which integrates compute resources (sqlservr.exe process) and storage (locally attached SSD) on a single node. High availability is achieved by replicating both compute and storage to additional nodes creating a three to four-node cluster.

By default, the cluster of nodes for the premium availability model is created in the same datacenter. With the introduction of Azure Availability Zones, SQL Database can place different replicas of the Business Critical database to different availability zones in the same region. To eliminate a single point of failure, the control ring is also duplicated across multiple zones as three gateway rings (GW).

Reference:

https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/azure-sql/database/high-availability-sla

You plan to move two 100-GB databases to Azure.

You need to dynamically scale resources consumption based on workloads. The solution must minimize downtime during scaling operations. What should you use?

A.
two Azure SQL Databases in an elastic pool
A.
two Azure SQL Databases in an elastic pool
Answers
B.
two databases hosted in SQL Server on an Azure virtual machine
B.
two databases hosted in SQL Server on an Azure virtual machine
Answers
C.
two databases in an Azure SQL Managed instance
C.
two databases in an Azure SQL Managed instance
Answers
D.
two single Azure SQL databases
D.
two single Azure SQL databases
Answers
Suggested answer: A

You have an on-premises app named App1 that stores data in an on-premises Microsoft SQL Server 2016 database named DB1. You plan to deploy additional instances of App1 to separate Azure regions. Each region will have a separate instance of App1 and DB1. The separate instances of DB1 will sync by using Azure SQL Data Sync. You need to recommend a database service for the deployment. The solution must minimize administrative effort. What should you include in the recommendation?

A.
Azure SQL Managed instance
A.
Azure SQL Managed instance
Answers
B.
Azure SQL Database single database
B.
Azure SQL Database single database
Answers
C.
Azure Database for PostgreSQL
C.
Azure Database for PostgreSQL
Answers
D.
SQL Server on Azure virtual machines
D.
SQL Server on Azure virtual machines
Answers
Suggested answer: B

Explanation:

Azure SQL Database single database supports Data Sync.

Incorrect Answers:

A: Azure SQL Managed instance does not support Data Sync.

Reference:

https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/azure-sql/database/features-comparison

Note: This question-is part of a series of questions that present the same scenario. Each question-in the series contains a unique solution that might meet the stated goals. Some question-sets might have more than one correct solution, while others might not have a correct solution.

After you answer a question-in this section, you will NOT be able to return to it. As a result, these questions will not appear in the review screen. You have two Azure SQL Database servers named Server1 and Server2. Each server contains an Azure SQL database named Database1. You need to restore Database1 from Server1 to Server2. The solution must replace the existing Database1 on Server2. Solution: From Microsoft SQL Server Management Studio (SSMS), you rename Database1 on Server2 as Database2. From the Azure portal, you create a new database on Server2 by restoring the backup of Database1 from Server1, and then you delete Database2.

Does this meet the goal?

A.
Yes
A.
Yes
Answers
B.
No
B.
No
Answers
Suggested answer: B

Explanation:

Instead restore Database1 from Server1 to the Server2 by using the RESTORE Transact-SQL command and the REPLACE option. Note: REPLACE should be used rarely and only after careful consideration. Restore normally prevents accidentally overwriting a database with a different database. If the database specified in a RESTORE statement already exists on the current server and the specified database family GUID differs from the database family GUID recorded in the backup set, the database is not restored. This is an important safeguard.

Reference:

https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/sql/t-sql/statements/restore-statements-transact-sql

DRAG DROP

You have SQL Server on an Azure virtual machine that contains a database named DB1. DB1 is 30 TB and has a 1-GB daily rate of change.

You back up the database by using a Microsoft SQL Server Agent job that runs Transact-SQL commands. You perform a weekly full backup on Sunday, daily differential backups at 01:00, and transaction log backups every five minutes.

The database fails on Wednesday at 10:00.

Which three backups should you restore in sequence? To answer, move the appropriate backups from the list of backups to the answer area and arrange them in the correct order.


Question 118
Correct answer: Question 118

You have an Azure subscription that uses a domain named contoso.com.

You have two Azure VMs named DBServer1 and DBServer2. Each of them hosts a default SQL Server instance. DBServer1 is in the East US Azure region and contains a database named DatabaseA. DBServer2 is in the West US Azure region.

DBServer1 has a high volume of data changes and low latency requirements for data writes.

You need to configure a new availability group for DatabaseA. The secondary replica will reside on DBServer2.

What should you do?

A.
Configure the primary endpoint as TCP://DBServer1.contoso.com:445, configure the secondary endpoint as TCP://DBServer2.contoso.com:445, and set the availability mode to Asynchronous.
A.
Configure the primary endpoint as TCP://DBServer1.contoso.com:445, configure the secondary endpoint as TCP://DBServer2.contoso.com:445, and set the availability mode to Asynchronous.
Answers
B.
Configure the primary endpoint as TCP://DBServer1.contoso.com:445, configure the secondary endpoint as TCP://DBServer2.contoso.com:445, and set the availability mode to Synchronous.
B.
Configure the primary endpoint as TCP://DBServer1.contoso.com:445, configure the secondary endpoint as TCP://DBServer2.contoso.com:445, and set the availability mode to Synchronous.
Answers
C.
Configure the primary endpoint as TCP://DBServer1.contoso.com:5022, configure the secondary endpoint as TCP://DBServer2.contoso.com:5022, and set the availability mode to Asynchronous.
C.
Configure the primary endpoint as TCP://DBServer1.contoso.com:5022, configure the secondary endpoint as TCP://DBServer2.contoso.com:5022, and set the availability mode to Asynchronous.
Answers
D.
Configure the primary endpoint as TCP://DBServer1.contoso.com:5022, configure the secondary endpoint as TCP://DBServer2.contoso.com:5022, and set the availability mode to Synchronous.
D.
Configure the primary endpoint as TCP://DBServer1.contoso.com:5022, configure the secondary endpoint as TCP://DBServer2.contoso.com:5022, and set the availability mode to Synchronous.
Answers
Suggested answer: C

Explanation:

Reference:

https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/sql/database-engine/availability-groups/windows/availability-modes-always-on-availability-groups?view=sql-server-ver15

You have an on-premises multi-tier application named App1 that includes a web tier, an application tier, and a Microsoft SQL Server tier. All the tiers run on Hyper-V virtual machines.

Your new disaster recovery plan requires that all business-critical applications can be recovered to Azure.

You need to recommend a solution to fail over the database tier of App1 to Azure. The solution must provide the ability to test failover to Azure without affecting the current environment.

What should you include in the recommendation?

A.
Azure Backup
A.
Azure Backup
Answers
B.
Azure Information Protection
B.
Azure Information Protection
Answers
C.
Windows Server Failover Cluster
C.
Windows Server Failover Cluster
Answers
D.
Azure Site Recovery
D.
Azure Site Recovery
Answers
Suggested answer: D

Explanation:

Reference:

https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/site-recovery/site-recovery-test-failover-to-azure

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