Which out-of-the-box key performance indicator measures the success of a typical Center for Enablement and is immediately available in responses from Anypoint Platform APIs?
A. Per business group, the ratio of the number of production APT implementations deployed using a C1/CD pipeline to the number of production API implementations deployed manually
B. Per deployed API implementation, the amount of bandwidth consumed each day
C. Per published API, the number of developers that downloaded s version of the API specification
D. Per published API, the number of consumers that requested access to the API and have been approved in the Production environment
A company wants to move its Mule API implementations into production as quickly as
possible. To protect access to all Mule application data and metadata, the company
requires that all Mule applications be deployed to the company's customer-hosted
infrastructure within the corporate firewall. What combination of runtime plane and control
plane options meets these project lifecycle goals?
A.
Manually provisioned customer-hosted runtime plane and customer-hosted control plane
B.
MuleSoft-hosted runtime plane and customer-hosted control plane
C.
Manually provisioned customer-hosted runtime plane and MuleSoft-hosted control plane
D.
iPaaS provisioned customer-hosted runtime plane and MuleSoft-hosted control plane
Manually provisioned customer-hosted runtime plane and customer-hosted control plane
Explanation:
Explanation
Correct Answer: Manually provisioned customer-hosted runtime plane and customerhosted
control plane
*****************************************
There are two key factors that are to be taken into consideration from the scenario given in
the question.
>> Company requires both data and metadata to be resided within the corporate firewall
>> Company would like to go with customer-hosted infrastructure.
Any deployment model that is to deal with the cloud directly or indirectly (Mulesoft-hosted
or Customer's own cloud like Azure, AWS) will have to share atleast the metadata.
Application data can be controlled inside firewall by having Mule Runtimes on customer
hosted runtime plane. But if we go with Mulsoft-hosted/ Cloud-based control plane, the
control plane required atleast some minimum level of metadata to be sent outside the
corporate firewall.
As the customer requirement is pretty clear about the data and metadata both to be within
the corporate firewall, even though customer wants to move to production as quickly as
possible, unfortunately due to the nature of their security requirements, they have no other
option but to go with manually provisioned customer-hosted runtime plane and customerhosted
control plane.
An organization is deploying their new implementation of the OrderStatus System API to
multiple workers in CloudHub. This API fronts the organization's on-premises Order
Management System, which is accessed by the API implementation over an IPsec tunnel.
What type of error typically does NOT result in a service outage of the OrderStatus System
API?
A.
A CloudHub worker fails with an out-of-memory exception
B.
API Manager has an extended outage during the initial deployment of the API
implementation
C.
The AWS region goes offline with a major network failure to the relevant AWS data centers
D.
The Order Management System is Inaccessible due to a network outage in the
organization's on-premises data center
A CloudHub worker fails with an out-of-memory exception
Explanation: Explanation
Correct Answer: A CloudHub worker fails with an out-of-memory exception.
*****************************************
>> An AWS Region itself going down will definitely result in an outage as it does not matter
how many workers are assigned to the Mule App as all of those in that region will go down.
This is a complete downtime and outage.
>> Extended outage of API manager during initial deployment of API implementation will of
course cause issues in proper application startup itself as the API Autodiscovery might fail
or API policy templates and polices may not be downloaded to embed at the time of
applicaiton startup etc... there are many reasons that could cause issues.
>> A network outage onpremises would of course cause the Order Management System
not accessible and it does not matter how many workers are assigned to the app they all
will fail and cause outage for sure.
The only option that does NOT result in a service outage is if a cloudhub worker fails with
an out-of-memory exception. Even if a worker fails and goes down, there are still other
workers to handle the requests and keep the API UP and Running. So, this is the right
answer.
A retail company is using an Order API to accept new orders. The Order API uses a JMS
queue to submit orders to a backend order management service. The normal load for
orders is being handled using two (2) CloudHub workers, each configured with 0.2 vCore.
The CPU load of each CloudHub worker normally runs well below 70%. However, several
times during the year the Order API gets four times (4x) the average number of orders.
This causes the CloudHub worker CPU load to exceed 90% and the order submission time
to exceed 30 seconds. The cause, however, is NOT the backend order management
service, which still responds fast enough to meet the response SLA for the Order API.
What is the MOST resource-efficient way to configure the Mule application's CloudHub
deployment to help the company cope with this performance challenge?
A.
Permanently increase the size of each of the two (2) CloudHub workers by at least four
times (4x) to one (1) vCore
B.
Use a vertical CloudHub autoscaling policy that triggers on CPU utilization greater than
70%
C.
Permanently increase the number of CloudHub workers by four times (4x) to eight (8)
CloudHub workers
D.
Use a horizontal CloudHub autoscaling policy that triggers on CPU utilization greater
than 70%
Use a horizontal CloudHub autoscaling policy that triggers on CPU utilization greater
than 70%
Explanation: Explanation
Correct Answer: Use a horizontal CloudHub autoscaling policy that triggers on CPU
utilization greater than 70%
*****************************************
The scenario in the question is very clearly stating that the usual traffic in the year is pretty
well handled by the existing worker configuration with CPU running well below 70%. The
problem occurs only "sometimes" occasionally when there is spike in the number of orders
coming in.
So, based on above, We neither need to permanently increase the size of each worker nor
need to permanently increase the number of workers. This is unnecessary as other than
those "occasional" times the resources are idle and wasted.
We have two options left now. Either to use horizontal Cloudhub autoscaling policy to
automatically increase the number of workers or to use vertical Cloudhub autoscaling
policy to automatically increase the vCore size of each worker.
Here, we need to take two things into consideration:
1. CPU
2. Order Submission Rate to JMS Queue
>> From CPU perspective, both the options (horizontal and vertical scaling) solves the
issue. Both helps to bring down the usage below 90%.
>> However, If we go with Vertical Scaling, then from Order Submission Rate perspective,
as the application is still being load balanced with two workers only, there may not be much
improvement in the incoming request processing rate and order submission rate to JMS
queue. The throughput would be same as before. Only CPU utilization comes down.
>> But, if we go with Horizontal Scaling, it will spawn new workers and adds extra hand to
increase the throughput as more workers are being load balanced now. This way we can
address both CPU and Order Submission rate.
Hence, Horizontal CloudHub Autoscaling policy is the right and best answer.
Refer to the exhibit.

A. Option A
B. Option B
C. Option C
D. Option D
Explanation:
When can CloudHub Object Store v2 be used?
A. To store an unlimited number of key-value pairs
B. To store payloads with an average size greater than 15MB
C. To store information in Mule 4 Object Store v1
D. To store key-value pairs with keys up to 300 characters
Explanation: CloudHub Object Store v2 is a managed key-value store provided by
MuleSoft to support various use cases where temporary data storage is required. Here’s
why Option D is correct:
Key Length Support: Object Store v2 allows storage of keys with a length of up to
300 characters, making it suitable for applications needing flexible and descriptive
keys.
Limitations on Size:
Key-Value Limits: Object Store v2 is designed for moderate, transient storage
needs, and does not support unlimited storage. Thus, Option A is incorrect.
Backward Compatibility: Object Store v2 does not support Mule 4 applications
running Object Store v1. Option C is incorrect as Object Store v1 and v2 are
distinct.
Select the correct Owner-Layer combinations from below options
A.
1. App Developers owns and focuses on Experience Layer APIs
2. Central IT owns and focuses on Process Layer APIs
3. LOB IT owns and focuses on System Layer APIs
B.
1. Central IT owns and focuses on Experience Layer APIs
2. LOB IT owns and focuses on Process Layer APIs
3. App Developers owns and focuses on System Layer APIs
C.
1. App Developers owns and focuses on Experience Layer APIs
2. LOB IT owns and focuses on Process Layer APIs
3. Central IT owns and focuses on System Layer APIs
1. App Developers owns and focuses on Experience Layer APIs
2. LOB IT owns and focuses on Process Layer APIs
3. Central IT owns and focuses on System Layer APIs
Explanation: Explanation
Correct Answer:
1. App Developers owns and focuses on Experience Layer APIs
2. LOB IT owns and focuses on Process Layer APIs
3. Central IT owns and focuses on System Layer APIs
References:
https://blogs.mulesoft.com/biz/api/experience-api-ownership/
https://blogs.mulesoft.com/biz/api/process-api-ownership/
https://blogs.mulesoft.com/biz/api/system-api-ownership
A customer wants to host their MuleSoft applications in CloudHub 1.0, and these
applications should be available at the domain https://api.acmecorp.com.
After creating a dedicated load balancer (DLB) called acme-dib-prod, which further action
must the customer take to complete the configuration?
A. Configure the DLB with a TLS certificate for api.acmecorp.com and create an A record for api.acmecorp.com to the public IP addresses associated with their DLB
B. Configure the DLB with a TLS certificate for api.acmecorp.com and create a CNAME record from api.acmecorp.com to acme-dib-prod.|lb.anypointdns.net
C. Configure the DLB with a TLS certificate for acme-dib-prod.Jb.anypointdns.net and create a CNAME record from api.acmecorp:com to acme-dlb-prod.lb.anypointdns.net
D. Configure the DLB with a TLS certificate for aplacmecorp.com and create a CNAME record from api.aomecorp.com to acme-dib-prod.ei.cloubhub.io
Explanation:
When setting up a custom domain for MuleSoft applications hosted on
CloudHub 1.0 using a Dedicated Load Balancer (DLB), follow these steps:
Set Up the TLS Certificate: Configure the DLB (acme-dib-prod) with a TLS
certificate that covers the custom domain api.acmecorp.com. This certificate will
allow HTTPS traffic to be securely directed through the DLB to your Mule
applications.
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