Q: 11
Which statement describes the transferring phase in the Delta Cycle of Oracle Cloud Infrastructure
(OCI) File System replication?
Options
Discussion
D imo. Saw a similar question on a practice and it was D.
It’s D here. The transferring phase isn’t just about moving data, it grabs the changed snapshot and also commits it to the target system. Pretty sure Oracle docs use that phrasing too, but open if anyone sees it differently.
D tbh. The trap is C, but in OCI's Delta Cycle, transferring means the process both captures and commits snapshot data, not just one or the other. Docs make this pretty clear I think. Open to pushback if I'm off here.
Ugh, Oracle's cycle naming drives me nuts. D not C here because transferring phase means it captures and commits the snapshot, not just one step. Seen similar phrasing on practice exams.
C/D? I'd double-check with the official Oracle docs or the OCI Cloud guide for this process. Practice exams helped me spot similar wording differences too.
Not totally sure but looks like D. The transferring phase should involve both capturing and applying snapshot data, right?
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Q: 12
Which Hybrid Cloud Extension (HCX) migration type is designed for large-scale migration of
workloads that cannot afford downtime?
Options
Discussion
Not D, it's C. Bulk Migration is fast but still needs downtime, so if zero downtime is required, only C fits that.
Probably C, that's the downtime-safe option for mass migrations.
Had something like this in a mock before-definitely C.
Its C, but still a bit confused between C and D since both mention scale.
C
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Q: 13
Which is NOT a valid connectivity model in Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) FastConnect?
Options
Discussion
C/D? Had something like this in a mock and pretty sure D is not a real OCI FastConnect model. The valid options are provider, partner, or colocation, not direct-to-cloud. Agree?
C/D? Still not 100 percent since "Colocation with Oracle" sometimes appears in different forms, but pretty sure D is wrong.
D that's the odd one out. The others are in Oracle docs as valid FastConnect models.
D tbh
Yeah, D is not an official connectivity model for OCI FastConnect. The real ones are provider, partner, or colocation. I think "Direct-to-Cloud" just isn't used in Oracle docs. Agree or am I missing something?
Pretty sure it's D. I don't remember "Direct-to-Cloud" as a real FastConnect model in the official Oracle docs. Practice tests and the official guide both stick to provider, partner, or colocation. Let me know if you saw otherwise.
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Q: 14
How does the Copy to another region feature in Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) aid in achieving
smooth transitions during Block Volume migration?
Options
Discussion
Option D is correct. B is tempting but it’s about block volume backups, not whole apps or automation.
Its D here since OCI just replicates Block Volume backups to the chosen region. It doesn’t handle application logic or real-time sync, so B and C aren’t a fit. Backup copies make migration smoother but it’s not automated app migration. Pretty sure about this but open if anyone disagrees.
B tbh. Automating the migration sounds like it would make transitions easier because it handles moving apps between regions without much manual effort. Not totally sure if that's what OCI does here though, but that's my take.
I don’t think it’s B, that’s a common distractor. D is right since OCI copies the backups, not entire apps.
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Q: 15
In Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI), how are Security Lists different from Network Security Groups
(NSGs) in terms of their functionality and application?
Options
Discussion
Option C, but if you assign a VNIC to multiple NSGs, you get even more granular control than with Security Lists alone.
I've seen similar in recent exam reports, pretty sure it's C
C
C Security Lists for all VNICs in subnet, NSGs target groups of VNICs. Confident but double check OCI docs.
C is right in this case. Security Lists cover the whole subnet (so every VNIC), but NSGs let you create tighter rules for just chosen VNICs, not everything. D looks like a distractor since they're not just renamed per region. Anyone see OCI change this lately?
Definitely C. Security Lists are subnet-wide, so they hit every VNIC, but NSGs let you target just certain VNICs regardless of subnet. Pretty sure that's how OCI does it, unless they've changed something recently.
C here, D is a trick since lists and NSGs don't just differ by name. Similar question popped up in practice sets.
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