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Download Oracle Cloud Infrastructure 2022 Developer Professional Exam Dumps

NEW QUESTION 28
You are developing a distributed application and you need a call to a path to always return a specific JSON content deploy an Oracle Cloud Infrastructure API Gateway with the below API deployment specification.
1Z0-1084-22-147a616cf0bf3d184d4766ae1994bbac.jpg
What is the correct value for type?

  • A. CONSTANT_BACKEND
  • B. JSON_BACKEND
  • C. STOCK_RESPONSE_BACKEND
  • D. HTTP_BACKEND

Answer: C

Explanation:
Adding Stock Responses as an API Gateway Back End:
You'll often want to verify that an API has been successfully deployed on an API gateway without having to set up an actual back-end service. One approach is to define a route in the API deployment specification that has a path to a 'dummy' back end. On receiving a request to that path, the API gateway itself acts as the back end and returns a stock response you've specified.
Equally, there are some situations in a production deployment where you'll want a particular path for a route to consistently return the same stock response without sending a request to a back end. For example, when you want a call to a path to always return a specific HTTP status code in the response.
Using the API Gateway service, you can define a path to a stock response back end that always returns the same:
HTTP status code
HTTP header fields (name-value pairs)
content in the body of the response
"type": "STOCK_RESPONSE_BACKEND" indicates that the API gateway itself will act as the back end and return the stock response you define (the status code, the header fields and the body content).
References:
https://docs.cloud.oracle.com/en-us/iaas/Content/APIGateway/Tasks/apigatewayaddingstockresponses.htm

 

NEW QUESTION 29
Which two statements accurately describe an Oracle Functions application?

  • A. A logical group of functions
  • B. A Docker image containing all the functions that share the same configuration
  • C. An application based on Oracle Functions, Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) Events and OCI API Gateway services
  • D. A small block of code invoked in response to an Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) Events service
  • E. A common context to store configuration variables that are available to all functions in the application

Answer: A,E

Explanation:
Oracle Functions Concepts:
This topic describes key concepts you need to understand when using Oracle Functions.
Applications:
In Oracle Functions, an application is:
1. a logical grouping of functions
2. a common context to store configuration variables that are available to all functions in the application
3. a way to ensure function runtime isolation
When you define an application in Oracle Functions, you specify the subnets in which to run the functions in the application. When functions from different applications are invoked simultaneously, Oracle Functions ensures these function executions are isolated from each other.
Oracle Functions shows applications and their functions in the Console.
References:
https://docs.cloud.oracle.com/en-us/iaas/Content/Functions/Concepts/functionsconcepts.htm

 

NEW QUESTION 30
You have created a repository in Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Registry in the us-ashburn-1 (iad) region in your tenancy with a namespace called "heyci.
Which three are valid tags for an image named "myapp"?

  • A. iad.ocir.io/heyoci/myproject/myapp:0.0.1
  • B. iad.ocir.io/heyoci/myapp:0.0.2-beta
  • C. us-ashburn-l.ocirJo/heyoci/myapp:0.0.2-beta
  • D. us-ashburn-l.ocir.io/heyoci/myproject/myapp:0.0.2-beta
  • E. us-ashburn-l.ocir.io/myproject/heyoci/myapp:latest
  • F. iad.ocir.io/myproject/heyoci/myapprlatest
  • G. iad.ocir.io/heyoci/myapp:latest

Answer: A,B,G

Explanation:
Give a tag to the image that you're going to push to Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Registry by entering:
docker tag <image-identifier> <target-tag>
where:
<image-identifier> uniquely identifies the image, either using the image's id (for example, 8e0506e14874), or the image's name and tag separated by a colon (for example, acme-web-app:latest).
<target-tag> is in the format <region-key>.ocir.io/<tenancy-namespace>/<repo-name>/<image-name>:<tag> where:
<region-key> is the key for the Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Registry region you're using. For example, iad. See Availability by Region.
ocir.io is the Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Registry name.
<tenancy-namespace> is the auto-generated Object Storage namespace string of the tenancy that owns the repository to which you want to push the image (as shown on the Tenancy Information page). For example, the namespace of the acme-dev tenancy might be ansh81vru1zp. Note that for some older tenancies, the namespace string might be the same as the tenancy name in all lower-case letters (for example, acme-dev). Note also that your user must have access to the tenancy.
<repo-name> (if specified) is the name of a repository to which you want to push the image (for example, project01). Note that specifying a repository is optional (see About Repositories).
<image-name> is the name you want to give the image in Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Registry (for example, acme-web-app).
<tag> is an image tag you want to give the image in Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Registry (for example, version2.0.test).
For example, for convenience you might want to group together multiple versions of the acme-web-app image in the acme-dev tenancy in the Ashburn region into a repository called project01. You do this by including the name of the repository in the image name when you push the image, in the format <region-key>.ocir.io/<tenancy-namespace>/<repo-name>/<image-name>:<tag>. For example, iad.ocir.io/ansh81vru1zp/project01/acme-web-app:4.6.3. Subsequently, when you use the docker push command, the presence of the repository in the image's name ensures the image is pushed to the intended repository.
If you push an image and include the name of a repository that doesn't already exist, a new private repository is created automatically. For example, if you enter a command like docker push iad.ocir.io/ansh81vru1zp/project02/acme-web-app:7.5.2 and the project02 repository doesn't exist, a private repository called project02 is created automatically.
If you push an image and don't include a repository name, the image's name is used as the name of the repository. For example, if you enter a command like docker push iad.ocir.io/ansh81vru1zp/acme-web-app:7.5.2 that doesn't contain a repository name, the image's name (acme-web-app) is used as the name of a private repository.
https://docs.cloud.oracle.com/en-us/iaas/Content/Registry/Concepts/registrywhatisarepository.htm

 

NEW QUESTION 31
Which two are required to enable Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) Container Engine for Kubernetes (OKE) cluster access from the kubect1 CLI?

  • A. Install and configure the OCI CLI
  • B. An SSH key pair with the public key added to cluster worker nodes
  • C. A configured OCI API signing key pair
  • D. Tiller enabled on the OKE cluster
  • E. OCI Identity and Access Management Auth Token

Answer: A,C

Explanation:
Setting Up Local Access to Clusters
To set up a kubeconfig file to enable access to a cluster using a local installation of kubectl and the Kubernetes Dashboard:
Step 1: Generate an API signing key pair
Step 2: Upload the public key of the API signing key pair
Step 3: Install and configure the Oracle Cloud Infrastructure CLI
Step 4: Set up the kubeconfig file
Step 5: Verify that kubectl can access the cluster
References:
https://docs.cloud.oracle.com/en-us/iaas/Content/ContEng/Tasks/contengdownloadkubeconfigfile.htm

 

NEW QUESTION 32
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