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
An online store's marketing team has noticed an increase in customers leaving online baskets without checking out. They suspect a technology issue is at the root cause of the baskets being left behind. They approach the Center for Enablement to ask for help identifying the issue. Multiple APIs from across all the layers of their application network are involved in the shopping application. Which feature of the Anypoint Platform can be used to view metrics from all involved APIs at the same time?
A. Custom dashboards
B. Built-in dashboards
C. Functional monitoring
D. API Manager
What Mule application deployment scenario requires using Anypoint Platform Private Cloud Edition or Anypoint Platform for Pivotal Cloud Foundry?
A.
When it Is required to make ALL applications highly available across multiple data centers
B.
When it is required that ALL APIs are private and NOT exposed to the public cloud
C.
When regulatory requirements mandate on-premises processing of EVERY data item, including meta-data
D.
When ALL backend systems in the application network are deployed in the
organization's intranet
When regulatory requirements mandate on-premises processing of EVERY data item, including meta-data
Explanation: Explanation
Correct Answer: When regulatory requirements mandate on-premises processing of EVERY data item, including meta-data.
*****************************************
We need NOT require to use Anypoint Platform PCE or PCF for the below. So these
options are OUT.
>> We can make ALL applications highly available across multiple data centers using
CloudHub too.
>> We can use Anypoint VPN and tunneling from CloudHub to connect to ALL backend
systems in the application network that are deployed in the organization's intranet.
>> We can use Anypoint VPC and Firewall Rules to make ALL APIs private and NOT
exposed to the public cloud.
Only valid reason in the given options that requires to use Anypoint Platform PCE/ PCF is -
When regulatory requirements mandate on-premises processing of EVERY data item,
including meta-data
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
To minimize operation costs, a customer wants to use a CloudHub 1.0 solution. The
customer's requirements are:
A. One production and one non-production Virtual Private Cloud (VPC).
Use availability zones to differentiate between Business groups.
Allocate maximum CIDR per VPCs to ensure HA across availability zones
B. One production and one non-production Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) per Business
group.
Minimize CIDR aligning with projected application total.
Choose a MuleSoft CloudHub 1.0 region with multiple availability zones.
Deploy multiple workers for HA,
C. One production and one non-production Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) per Business
group.
Minimize CIDR aligning with projected application total.
Divide availability zones during deployment of APIs for HA.
D. One production and one non-production Virtual Private Claud (VPC).
Configure subnet to differentiate between business groups.
Allocate maximum CIDR per VPCs to make it easier to add Child groups.
Span VPC to cover three availability zones.
An Order API triggers a sequence of other API calls to look up details of an order's items in
a back-end inventory database. The Order API calls the OrderItems process API, which
calls the Inventory system API. The Inventory system API performs database operations in
the back-end inventory database.
The network connection between the Inventory system API and the database is known to
be unreliable and hang at unpredictable times.
Where should a two-second timeout be configured in the API processing sequence so that
the Order API never waits more than two seconds for a response from the Orderltems
process API?

A. In the Orderltems process API implementation
B. In the Order API implementation
C. In the Inventory system API implementation
D. In the inventory database
What is true about where an API policy is defined in Anypoint Platform and how it is then applied to API instances?
A.
The API policy Is defined In Runtime Manager as part of the API deployment to a Mule
runtime, and then ONLY applied to the specific API Instance
B.
The API policy Is defined In API Manager for a specific API Instance, and then ONLY
applied to the specific API instance
C.
The API policy Is defined in API Manager and then automatically applied to ALL API instances
D.
The API policy is defined in API Manager, and then applied to ALL API instances in the
specified environment
The API policy Is defined In API Manager for a specific API Instance, and then ONLY
applied to the specific API instance
Explanation: Explanation
Correct Answer: The API policy is defined in API Manager for a specific API instance, and
then ONLY applied to the specific API instance.
*****************************************
>> Once our API specifications are ready and published to Exchange, we need to visit API
Manager and register an API instance for each API.
>> API Manager is the place where management of API aspects takes place like
addressing NFRs by enforcing policies on them.
>> We can create multiple instances for a same API and manage them differently for
different purposes.
>> One instance can have a set of API policies applied and another instance of same API
can have different set of policies applied for some other purpose.
>> These APIs and their instances are defined PER environment basis. So, one need to
manage them seperately in each environment.
>> We can ensure that same configuration of API instances (SLAs, Policies etc..) gets
promoted when promoting to higher environments using platform feature. But this is
optional only. Still one can change them per environment basis if they have to.
>> Runtime Manager is the place to manage API Implementations and their Mule Runtimes
but NOT APIs itself. Though API policies gets executed in Mule Runtimes, We CANNOT
enforce API policies in Runtime Manager. We would need to do that via API Manager only
for a cherry picked instance in an environment.
So, based on these facts, right statement in the given choices is - "The API policy is
defined in API Manager for a specific API instance, and then ONLY applied to the specific
API instance".
Reference: https://docs.mulesoft.com/api-manager/2.x/latest-overview-concept
Version 3.0.1 of a REST API implementation represents time values in PST time using ISO 8601 hh:mm:ss format. The API implementation needs to be changed to instead represent time values in CEST time using ISO 8601 hh:mm:ss format. When following the semver.org semantic versioning specification, what version should be assigned to the updated API implementation?
A.
3.0.2
B.
4.0.0
C.
3.1.0
D.
3.0.1
4.0.0
Explanation: Explanation
Correct Answer: 4.0.0
*****************************************
As per semver.org semantic versioning specification:
Given a version number MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH, increment the:
- MAJOR version when you make incompatible API changes.
- MINOR version when you add functionality in a backwards compatible manner.
- PATCH version when you make backwards compatible bug fixes.
As per the scenario given in the question, the API implementation is completely changing
its behavior. Although the format of the time is still being maintained as hh:mm:ss and there
is no change in schema w.r.t format, the API will start functioning different after this change
as the times are going to come completely different.
Example: Before the change, say, time is going as 09:00:00 representing the PST. Now on,
after the change, the same time will go as 18:00:00 as Central European Summer Time is
9 hours ahead of Pacific Time.
>> This may lead to some uncertain behavior on API clients depending on how they are
handling the times in the API response. All the API clients need to be informed that the API
functionality is going to change and will return in CEST format. So, this considered as a
MAJOR change and the version of API for this new change would be 4.0.0
| Page 1 out of 19 Pages |