Professional-Cloud-Network-Engineer Exam Question 96

You are a network administrator at your company planning a migration to Google Cloud and you need to finish the migration as quickly as possible, To ease the transition, you decided to use the same architecture as your on-premises network' a hub-and-spoke model. Your on-premises architecture consists of over 50 spokes. Each spoke does not have connectivity to the other spokes, and all traffic IS sent through the hub for security reasons. You need to ensure that the Google Cloud architecture matches your on-premises architecture. You want to implement a solution that minimizes management overhead and cost, and uses default networking quotas and limits. What should you do?
  • Professional-Cloud-Network-Engineer Exam Question 97

    You are designing a new global application using Compute Engine instances that will be exposed by a global HTTP(S) load balancer. You need to secure your application from distributed denial-of-service and application layer (layer 7) attacks. What should you do?
  • Professional-Cloud-Network-Engineer Exam Question 98

    All the instances in your project are configured with the custom metadata enable-oslogin value set to FALSE and to block project-wide SSH keys. None of the instances are set with any SSH key, and no project-wide SSH keys have been configured. Firewall rules are set up to allow SSH sessions from any IP address range. You want to SSH into one instance.
    What should you do?
  • Professional-Cloud-Network-Engineer Exam Question 99

    You need to create a GKE cluster in an existing VPC that is accessible from on-premises. You must meet the following requirements:
    * IP ranges for pods and services must be as small as possible.
    * The nodes and the master must not be reachable from the internet.
    * You must be able to use kubectl commands from on-premises subnets to manage the cluster.
    How should you create the GKE cluster?
  • Professional-Cloud-Network-Engineer Exam Question 100

    Your on-premises data center has 2 routers connected to your Google Cloud environment through a VPN on each router. All applications are working correctly; however, all of the traffic is passing across a single VPN instead of being load-balanced across the 2 connections as desired.
    During troubleshooting you find:
    * Each on-premises router is configured with a unique ASN.
    * Each on-premises router is configured with the same routes and priorities.
    * Both on-premises routers are configured with a VPN connected to a single Cloud Router.
    * BGP sessions are established between both on-premises routers and the Cloud Router.
    * Only 1 of the on-premises router's routes are being added to the routing table.
    What is the most likely cause of this problem?