Mulesoft MCPA-Level-1 Exam Questions

151 Questions


Updation Date : 13-Jan-2026



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A business process is being implemented within an organization's application network. The architecture group proposes using a more coarse-grained application network design with relatively fewer APIs deployed to the application network compared to a more fine-grained design. Overall, which factor typically increases with a more coarse-grained design for this business process implementation and deployment compared with using a more finegrained design?


A. The complexity of each API implementation


B. The number of discoverable assets related to APIs deployed in the application network


C. The number of possible connections between API implementations in the application network


D. The usage of network infrastructure resources by the application network





A.
  The complexity of each API implementation

In which layer of API-led connectivity, does the business logic orchestration reside?


A.

System Layer


B.

Experience Layer


C.

Process Layer





C.
  

Process Layer



Explanation: Explanation
Correct Answer: Process Layer
*****************************************
>> Experience layer is dedicated for enrichment of end user experience. This layer is to
meet the needs of different API clients/ consumers.
>> System layer is dedicated to APIs which are modular in nature and implement/ expose
various individual functionalities of backend systems
>> Process layer is the place where simple or complex business orchestration logic is
written by invoking one or many System layer modular APIs
So, Process Layer is the right answer.

What is a typical result of using a fine-grained rather than a coarse-grained API deployment model to implement a given business process?


A.

A decrease in the number of connections within the application network supporting the business process


B.

A higher number of discoverable API-related assets in the application network


C.

A better response time for the end user as a result of the APIs being smaller in scope and complexity


D.

An overall tower usage of resources because each fine-grained API consumes less resources





B.
  

A higher number of discoverable API-related assets in the application network



Explanation: Explanation
Correct Answer: A higher number of discoverable API-related assets in the application
network.
*****************************************
>> We do NOT get faster response times in fine-grained approach when compared to
coarse-grained approach.
>> In fact, we get faster response times from a network having coarse-grained APIs
compared to a network having fine-grained APIs model. The reasons are below.
Fine-grained approach:
1. will have more APIs compared to coarse-grained
2. So, more orchestration needs to be done to achieve a functionality in business process.
3. Which means, lots of API calls to be made. So, more connections will needs to be
established. So, obviously more hops, more network i/o, more number of integration points
compared to coarse-grained approach where fewer APIs with bulk functionality embedded
in them.
4. That is why, because of all these extra hops and added latencies, fine-grained approach
will have bit more response times compared to coarse-grained.
5. Not only added latencies and connections, there will be more resources used up in finegrained
approach due to more number of APIs.
That's why, fine-grained APIs are good in a way to expose more number of resuable assets
in your network and make them discoverable. However, needs more maintenance, taking
care of integration points, connections, resources with a little compromise w.r.t network
hops and response times.

An organization has several APIs that accept JSON data over HTTP POST. The APIs are
all publicly available and are associated with several mobile applications and web
applications.
The organization does NOT want to use any authentication or compliance policies for these
APIs, but at the same time, is worried that some bad actor could send payloads that could
somehow compromise the applications or servers running the API implementations.
What out-of-the-box Anypoint Platform policy can address exposure to this threat?


A.

Shut out bad actors by using HTTPS mutual authentication for all API invocations


B.

Apply an IP blacklist policy to all APIs; the blacklist will Include all bad actors


C.

Apply a Header injection and removal policy that detects the malicious data before it is used


D.

Apply a JSON threat protection policy to all APIs to detect potential threat vectors





D.
  

Apply a JSON threat protection policy to all APIs to detect potential threat vectors



Explanation: Explanation
Correct Answer: Apply a JSON threat protection policy to all APIs to detect potential threat
vectors
*****************************************
>> Usually, if the APIs are designed and developed for specific consumers (known
consumers/customers) then we would IP Whitelist the same to ensure that traffic only
comes from them.
>> However, as this scenario states that the APIs are publicly available and being used by
so many mobile and web applications, it is NOT possible to identify and blacklist all
possible bad actors.
>> So, JSON threat protection policy is the best chance to prevent any bad JSON payloads
from such bad actors.

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





D.
  Per published API, the number of consumers that requested access to the API and have been approved in the Production environment

Which of the following sequence is correct?


A.

API Client implementes logic to call an API >> API Consumer requests access to API >>
API Implementation routes the request to >> API


B.

API Consumer requests access to API >> API Client implementes logic to call an API >>
API routes the request to >> API Implementation


C.

API Consumer implementes logic to call an API >> API Client requests access to API >>
API Implementation routes the request to >> API


D.

API Client implementes logic to call an API >> API Consumer requests access to API >>
API routes the request to >> API Implementation





B.
  

API Consumer requests access to API >> API Client implementes logic to call an API >>
API routes the request to >> API Implementation



Explanation: Explanation
Correct Answer: API Consumer requests access to API >> API Client implementes logic to
call an API >> API routes the request to >> API Implementation
*****************************************
>> API consumer does not implement any logic to invoke APIs. It is just a role. So, the
option stating "API Consumer implementes logic to call an API" is INVALID.
>> API Implementation does not route any requests. It is a final piece of logic where
functionality of target systems is exposed. So, the requests should be routed to the API
implementation by some other entity. So, the options stating "API Implementation routes
the request to >> API" is INVALID
>> The statements in one of the options are correct but sequence is wrong. The sequence
is given as "API Client implementes logic to call an API >> API Consumer requests access
to API >> API routes the request to >> API Implementation". Here, the statements in the
options are VALID but sequence is WRONG.
>> Right option and sequence is the one where API consumer first requests access to API
on Anypoint Exchange and obtains client credentials. API client then writes logic to call an
API by using the access client credentials requested by API consumer and the requests will
be routed to API implementation via the API which is managed by API Manager

When should idempotency be taken into account?


A. When making requests to update currently locked entities


B. When storing the results of s previous request for use in response to subsequent requests


C. When sending concurrent update requests for the same entity


D. When preventing duplicate processing from multiple sent requests





D.
  When preventing duplicate processing from multiple sent requests

What Mule application can have API policies applied by
Anypoint Platform to the endpoint exposed by that Mule application?
A) A Mule application that accepts requests over HTTP/1.x



A.

Option A


B.

Option B


C.

Option C


D.

Option D





A.
  

Option A



Explanation: Explanation
Correct Answer: Option A
*****************************************
>> Anypoint API Manager and API policies are applicable to all types of HTTP/1.x APIs.
>> They are not applicable to WebSocket APIs, HTTP/2 APIs and gRPC APIs
Reference: https://docs.mulesoft.com/api-manager/2.x/using-policies


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