Mulesoft MCPA-Level-1 Exam Questions

151 Questions


Updation Date : 1-Jan-2026



Mulesoft MCPA-Level-1 exam questions feature realistic, exam-like questions that cover all key topics with detailed explanations. You’ll identify your strengths and weaknesses, allowing you to focus your study efforts effectively. By practicing with our MCPA-Level-1 practice test, you’ll gain the knowledge, speed, and confidence needed to pass the Mulesoft exam on your first attempt.

Why leave your success to chance? Our Mulesoft MCPA-Level-1 dumps are your ultimate guide to passing the exam on your first try!

Which layer in the API-led connectivity focuses on unlocking key systems, legacy systems, data sources etc and exposes the functionality?


A.

Experience Layer


B.

Process Layer


C.

System Layer





C.
  

System Layer



Explanation: Explanation
Correct Answer: System Layer

When using CloudHub with the Shared Load Balancer, what is managed EXCLUSIVELY
by the API implementation (the Mule application) and NOT by Anypoint Platform?


A.

The assignment of each HTTP request to a particular CloudHub worker


B.

The logging configuration that enables log entries to be visible in Runtime Manager


C.

The SSL certificates used by the API implementation to expose HTTPS endpoints


D.

The number of DNS entries allocated to the API implementation





C.
  

The SSL certificates used by the API implementation to expose HTTPS endpoints



Explanation: Explanation
Correct Answer: The SSL certificates used by the API implementation to expose HTTPS
endpoints
*****************************************
>> The assignment of each HTTP request to a particular CloudHub worker is taken care by
Anypoint Platform itself. We need not manage it explicitly in the API implementation and in
fact we CANNOT manage it in the API implementation.
>> The logging configuration that enables log entries to be visible in Runtime Manager is
ALWAYS managed in the API implementation and NOT just for SLB. So this is not
something we do EXCLUSIVELY when using SLB.
>> We DO NOT manage the number of DNS entries allocated to the API implementation
inside the code. Anypoint Platform takes care of this.
It is the SSL certificates used by the API implementation to expose HTTPS endpoints that
is to be managed EXCLUSIVELY by the API implementation. Anypoint Platform does NOT
do this when using SLBs.

A company requires Mule applications deployed to CloudHub to be isolated between nonproduction
and production environments. This is so Mule applications deployed to nonproduction
environments can only access backend systems running in their customerhosted
non-production environment, and so Mule applications deployed to production
environments can only access backend systems running in their customer-hosted
production environment. How does MuleSoft recommend modifying Mule applications,
configuring environments, or changing infrastructure to support this type of perenvironment
isolation between Mule applications and backend systems?


A.

Modify properties of Mule applications deployed to the production Anypoint Platform
environments to prevent access from non-production Mule applications


B.

Configure firewall rules in the infrastructure inside each customer-hosted environment so
that only IP addresses from the corresponding Anypoint Platform environments are allowed
to communicate with corresponding backend systems


C.

Create non-production and production environments in different Anypoint Platform
business groups


D.

Create separate Anypoint VPCs for non-production and production environments, then configure connections to the backend systems in the corresponding customer-hosted
environments





D.
  

Create separate Anypoint VPCs for non-production and production environments, then configure connections to the backend systems in the corresponding customer-hosted
environments



Explanation: Explanation
Correct Answer: Create separate Anypoint VPCs for non-production and production
environments, then configure connections to the backend systems in the corresponding
customer-hosted environments.
*****************************************
>> Creating different Business Groups does NOT make any difference w.r.t accessing the
non-prod and prod customer-hosted environments. Still they will be accessing from both
Business Groups unless process network restrictions are put in place.
>> We need to modify or couple the Mule Application Implementations with the
environment. In fact, we should never implements application coupled with environments
by binding them in the properties. Only basic things like endpoint URL etc should be
bundled in properties but not environment level access restrictions.
>> IP addresses on CloudHub are dynamic until unless a special static addresses are
assigned. So it is not possible to setup firewall rules in customer-hosted infrastrcture. More
over, even if static IP addresses are assigned, there could be 100s of applications running
on cloudhub and setting up rules for all of them would be a hectic task, non-maintainable
and definitely got a good practice.
>> The best practice recommended by Mulesoft (In fact any cloud provider), is to have
your Anypoint VPCs seperated for Prod and Non-Prod and perform the VPC peering or
VPN tunneling for these Anypoint VPCs to respective Prod and Non-Prod customer-hosted
environment networks.
: https://docs.mulesoft.com/runtime-manager/virtual-private-cloud
Bottom of Form
Top of Form

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

An API implementation is updated. When must the RAML definition of the API also be updated?


A.

When the API implementation changes the structure of the request or response messages


B.

When the API implementation changes from interacting with a legacy backend system deployed on-premises to a modern, cloud-based (SaaS) system


C.

When the API implementation is migrated from an older to a newer version of the Mule runtime


D.

When the API implementation is optimized to improve its average response time





A.
  

When the API implementation changes the structure of the request or response messages



Explanation: Explanation
Correct Answer: When the API implementation changes the structure of the request or
response messages
*****************************************
>> RAML definition usually needs to be touched only when there are changes in the
request/response schemas or in any traits on API.
>> It need not be modified for any internal changes in API implementation like performance
tuning, backend system migrations etc

What is a key performance indicator (KPI) that measures the success of a typical C4E that is immediately apparent in responses from the Anypoint Platform APIs?


A.

The number of production outage incidents reported in the last 24 hours


B.

The number of API implementations that have a publicly accessible HTTP endpoint and are being managed by Anypoint Platform


C.

The fraction of API implementations deployed manually relative to those deployed using a CI/CD tool


D.

The number of API specifications in RAML or OAS format published to Anypoint
Exchange





D.
  

The number of API specifications in RAML or OAS format published to Anypoint
Exchange



Explanation: Explanation
Correct Answer: The number of API specifications in RAML or OAS format published to
Anypoint Exchange
*****************************************
>> The success of C4E always depends on their contribution to the number of reusable
assets that they have helped to build and publish to Anypoint Exchange.
>> It is NOT due to any factors w.r.t # of outages, Manual vs CI/CD deployments or
Publicly accessible HTTP endpoints
>> Anypoint Platform APIs helps us to quickly run and get the number of published
RAML/OAS assets to Anypoint Exchange. This clearly depicts how successful a C4E team
is based on number of returned assets in the response.
Reference: https://help.mulesoft.com/s/question/0D52T00004mXSTUSA4/how-should-acompany-
measure-c4e-success

An API implementation is deployed to CloudHub. What conditions can be alerted on using the default Anypoint Platform functionality, where the alert conditions depend on the API invocations to an API implementation?


A. When the API invocations are sent directly to the internal DNS record of the API implementation


B. When the API invocations are not over-a- secure TLS/SSL communication channel


C. When the APL invecations originate from a geography different than the API


D. When the number of API invocations are below a threshold





D.
  When the number of API invocations are below a threshold

The implementation of a Process API must change.What is a valid approach that minimizes the impact of this change on API clients?


A.

Update the RAML definition of the current Process API and notify API client developers
by sending them links to the updated RAML definition


B.

Postpone changes until API consumers acknowledge they are ready to migrate to a new
Process API or API version


C.

Implement required changes to the Process API implementation so that whenever
possible, the Process API's RAML definition remains unchanged


D.

Implement the Process API changes in a new API implementation, and have the old API
implementation return an HTTP status code 301 - Moved Permanently to inform API clients
they should be calling the new API implementation





C.
  

Implement required changes to the Process API implementation so that whenever
possible, the Process API's RAML definition remains unchanged



Explanation: Explanation
Correct Answer: Implement required changes to the Process API implementation so that,
whenever possible, the Process API’s RAML definition remains unchanged.
*****************************************
Key requirement in the question is:
>> Approach that minimizes the impact of this change on API clients
Based on above:
>> Updating the RAML definition would possibly impact the API clients if the changes
require any thing mandatory from client side. So, one should try to avoid doing that until
really necessary.
>> Implementing the changes as a completely different API and then redirectly the clients
with 3xx status code is really upsetting design and heavily impacts the API clients.
>> Organisations and IT cannot simply postpone the changes required until all API
consumers acknowledge they are ready to migrate to a new Process API or API version.
This is unrealistic and not possible.
The best way to handle the changes always is to implement required changes to the API
implementations so that, whenever possible, the API’s RAML definition remains
unchanged.


Page 1 out of 19 Pages