Skip to Content

AZ-900 Microsoft Azure Fundamentals Exam Questions and Answers – Page 2 Part 1

The latest Microsoft AZ-900 Azure Fundamentals certification actual real practice exam question and answer (Q&A) dumps are available free, which are helpful for you to pass the Microsoft AZ-900 Azure Fundamentals exam and earn Microsoft AZ-900 Azure Fundamentals certification.

Question 121

Your company implements [Azure policies] to automatically add a watermark to Microsoft Word documents that contain credit card information.
Instructions: Review the underlined text. If it makes the statement correct, select “No change is needed”. If the statement is incorrect, select the answer choice that makes the statement correct.

A. No change is needed.
B. DDoS protection
* C. Azure Information Protection
D. Azure Active Directory (Azure AD) Identity Protection

Explanation

Azure Information Protection is used to automatically add a watermark to Microsoft Word documents that contain credit card information. You use Azure Information Protection labels to apply classification to documents and emails. When you do this, the classification is identifiable regardless of where the data is stored or with whom it’s shared. The labels can include visual markings such as a header, footer, or watermark. Labels can be applied automatically by administrators who define rules and conditions, manually by users, or a combination where users are given recommendations. In this question, we would configure a label to be automatically applied to Microsoft Word documents that contain credit card information. The label would then add the watermark to the documents.
An Azure Information Protection policy contains the following elements that you can configure:

  • Which labels are included that let administrators and users classify (and optionally, protect) documents and emails.
  • Title and tooltip for the Information Protection bar that users see in their Office applications.
  • The option to set a default label as a starting point for classifying documents and emails.
  • The option to enforce classification when users save documents and send emails.
  • The option to prompt users to provide a reason when they select a label that has a lower sensitivity level than the original.
  • The option to automatically label an email message, based on its attachments.
  • The option to control whether the Information Protection bar is displayed in Office applications.
  • The option to control whether the Do Not Forward button is displayed in Outlook.
  • The option to let users specify their own permissions for documents.
  • The option to provide a custom help link for users.

Question 122

When planning to migrate a public website to Azure, you must plan to [pay monthly usage costs].
Instructions: Review the underlined text. If it makes the statement correct, select “No change is needed”. If the statement is incorrect, select the answer choice that makes the statement correct.

* A. No change is needed
B. deploy a VPN
C. pay to transfer all the website data to Azure
D. reduce the number of connections to the website

Explanation

When planning to migrate a public website to Azure, you must plan to pay monthly usage costs. This is because Azure uses the pay-as-you-go model.

Azure doesn’t directly bill based on the resource cost. Charges for a resource are calculated by using one or more meters. Meters are used to track a resource’s usage throughout its lifetime. These meters are then used to calculate the bill.

For example, when you create a single Azure resource, like a virtual machine, it has one or more meter instances created. Meters are used to track the usage of the resource over time. Each meter emits usage records that are used by Azure to calculate the bill.

For example, a single virtual machine (VM) created in Azure may have the following meters created to track its usage:

Compute Hours, IP Address Hours, Data Transfer In, Data Transfer Out, Standard Managed Disk, Standard Managed Disk Operations, Standard IO-Disk, Standard IO-Block Blob Read, Standard IO-Block Blob Write, Standard IO-Block Blob Delete

Question 123

[Azure policies provide] a common platform for deploying objects to a cloud infrastructure and for implementing consistency across the Azure environment.
Instructions: Review the underlined text. If it makes the statement correct, select “No change is needed”. If the statement is incorrect, select the answer choice that makes the statement correct.

A. No change is needed
B. Resource groups provide
* C. Azure Resource Manager provides
D. Management groups provide

Explanation

Azure Resource Manager is the deployment and management service for Azure. It provides a consistent management layer that enables you to create, update, and delete resources in your Azure subscription. You can use its access control, auditing, and tagging features to secure and organize your resources after deployment.
When you take actions through the portal, PowerShell, Azure CLI, REST APIs, or client SDKs, the Azure Resource Manager API handles your request. Because all requests are handled through the same API, you see consistent results and capabilities in all the different tools. All capabilities that are available in the portal are also available through PowerShell, Azure CLI, REST APIs, and client SDKs.
When a user sends a request from any of the Azure tools, APIs, or SDKs, Resource Manager receives the request. It authenticates and authorizes the request. Resource Manager sends the request to the Azure service, which takes the requested action. Because all requests are handled through the same API, you see consistent results and capabilities in all the different tools.
Terminology:

  • resource: A manageable item that is available through Azure. Virtual machines, storage accounts, web apps, databases, and virtual networks are examples of resources.
  • resource group: A container that holds related resources for an Azure solution. The resource group includes those resources that you want to manage as a group. You decide which resources belong in a resource group based on what makes the most sense for your organization.
  • resource provider: A service that supplies Azure resources. For example, a common resource provider is Microsoft.Compute, which supplies the virtual machine resource. Microsoft.Storage is another common resource provider.
  • Resource Manager template: A JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) file that defines one or more resources to deploy to a resource group or subscription. The template can be used to deploy the resources consistently and repeatedly.
  • declarative syntax: Syntax that lets you state “Here is what I intend to create” without having to write the sequence of programming commands to create it. The Resource Manager template is an example of declarative syntax. In the file, you define the properties for the infrastructure to deploy to Azure.

Question 124

You have an Azure virtual network named VNET1 in a resource group named RG1.
You assign an Azure policy specifying that virtual networks are not an allowed resource type in RG1.
VNET1 [is deleted automatically.]
Instructions: Review the underlined text. If it makes the statement correct, select “No change is needed”. If the statement is incorrect, select the answer choice that makes the statement correct.

A. No change is needed
B. is moved automatically to another resource group
* C. continues to function normally
D. is now a read-only object

Explanation

The journey of creating and implementing a policy in Azure Policy begins with creating a policy definition. Every policy definition has conditions under which it’s enforced. And, it has a defined effect that takes place if the conditions are met.
In Azure Policy, we offer several built-in policies that are available by default. For example:
Allowed Resource Type: Defines the resource types that you can deploy. Its effect is to deny all resources that aren’t part of this defined list.
Not allowed resource types: Prevents a list of resource types from being deployed.

Question 125

You deploy an Azure resource.
The resource becomes unavailable for an extended period due to a service outage.
Microsoft will [automatically refund your bank account.]
Instructions: Review the underlined text. If it makes the statement correct, select “No change is needed”. If the statement is incorrect, select the answer choice that makes the statement correct.

A. No change is needed.
B. automatically migrate the resource to another subscription
* C. automatically credit your account
D. send you a coupon code that you can redeem for Azure credits

Question 126

Your company plans to migrate to Azure.
The company has several departments.
All the Azure resources used by each department will be managed by a department administrator.
You need to recommend an Azure deployment that provides the ability to segment Azure for the departments.
The solution must minimize administrative effort.
What should you include in the recommendation?

* A. multiple subscriptions
B. multiple Azure Active Directory (Azure AD) directories
C. multiple regions
D. multiple resource groups

Explanation

A subscription is an agreement with Microsoft to use one or more Microsoft cloud platforms or services, for which charges accrue based on either a per-user license fee or on cloud-based resource consumption. Microsoft’s Software as a Service (SaaS)-based cloud offerings (Office 365, Intune/EMS, and Dynamics 365) charge per-user license fees. Microsoft’s Platform as a Service (PaaS) and Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) cloud offerings (Azure) charge based on cloud resource consumption.
You can also use a trial subscription, but the subscription expires after a specific amount of time or consumption charges. You can convert a trial subscription to a paid subscription.

Question 127

Your company plans to migrate all on-premises data to Azure.
You need to identify whether Azure complies with the company’s regional requirements.
What should you use?

A. the Knowledge Center
B. Azure Marketplace
C. the Azure portal
* D. the Trust Center

Question 128

Match the Azure Cloud Services benefit to the correct description.
Instructions: To answer, drag the appropriate benefit from the column on the left to its description on the right. Each benefit may be used once, more than once, or not at all.
NOTE: Each correct match is worth one point.

  • Disaster recovery
  • Fault tolerance
  • Low latency
  • Dynamic scalability

A. A cloud service that remains available after a failure occurs.
B. A cloud service that can be recovered after a failure occurs.
C. A cloud service that performs quickly when demand increases.
D. A cloud service that can be accessed quickly from the Internet.

Answer: Box 1: Fault tolerance
Box 2: Disaster recovery
Box 3: Dynamic scalability
Box 4: Low latency

Explanation

Box 1: Fault tolerance is the ability of a service to remain available after a failure of one of the components of the service. For example, a service running on multiple servers can withstand the failure of one of the servers.
Box 2: Disaster recovery is the recovery of a service after a failure. For example, restoring a virtual machine from backup after a virtual machine failure.
Box 3: Dynamic scalability is the ability for compute resources to be added to a service when the service is under heavy load. For example, in a virtual machine scale set, additional instances of the virtual machine are added when the existing virtual machines are under heavy load.
Box 4: Latency is the time a service to respond to requests. For example, the time it takes for a web page to be returned from a web server. Low latency means low response time which means a quicker response.

Question 129

You create a resource group named RG1 in Azure Resource Manager.
You need to prevent the deletion of the resources in RG1.
Which setting should you use? To answer, select the appropriate setting in the answer area.

Answer: Settings -> LOCKS

Question 130

You plan to implement an Azure database solution.
You need to implement a database solution that meets the following requirements:

  • Can add data concurrently from multiple regions
  • Can store JSON documents

Which database service should you deploy?

Which database service should you deploy?

* A. Azure Cosmos DB.
B. Azure Database for MySQL servers.
C. SQL Servers.
D. SQL data warehouse.
E. Azure Database for PostgreSQL servers.

Explanation

Today’s applications are required to be highly responsive and always online. To achieve low latency and high availability, instances of these applications need to be deployed in datacenters that are close to their users. Applications need to respond in real time to large changes in usage at peak hours, store ever increasing volumes of data, and make this data available to users in milliseconds.
Azure Cosmos DB is Microsoft’s globally distributed, multi-model database service. With a click of a button, Cosmos DB enables you to elastically and independently scale throughput and storage across any number of Azure regions worldwide. You can elastically scale throughput and storage, and take advantage of fast, single-digit-millisecond data access using your favorite API including: SQL, MongoDB, Cassandra, Tables, or Gremlin. Cosmos DB provides comprehensive service level agreements (SLAs) for throughput, latency, availability, and consistency guarantees, something no other database service offers.