Q: 2
What is the role of realms in the Cisco ISE and Cisco Secure Firewall Management Center
integration?
Options
Discussion
Option C makes sense here. In Cisco Secure Firewall FMC, realms are used to map AD domains to VDCs for user ID integration, which lines up with what the official guides and practice tests say. I think B often gets confused because realms do reference AD, but their main function in this context is about mapping to the firewall's VDC structure. Pretty sure C is right but open if anyone has a recent exam doc that says otherwise.
Some folks might pick D, but if you read closely the integration’s about VDC mapping so C.
Option C but if the integration was about ISE-provided user context instead of FMC's user identity mapping, D would look tempting. I've seen similar questions where that context flip changes the answer.
Its C. In Cisco Secure Firewall Management Center, realms are basically logical containers for the user identity sources, like AD or LDAP, and they relate to virtual domains (VDCs) when integrating with ISE. The realm controls how user info is mapped in FMC, so that's the key tie in this integration. Pretty sure that’s what the question is getting at but open to other thoughts if someone has a different take.
If the realm config isn't mapped to a VDC, would B actually be more accurate in some deployments?
C Realms are mapped to VDCs in FMC, not just AD definitions.
C for sure. Realms in FMC are tied to VDCs, not just user context from ISE. Pretty sure that's what they're after here, makes sense given the integration flow. Disagree?
C (not sure) is correct here. Had something like this in a mock-realms are tied to Secure Firewall VDC for integrating user identities. Not just AD definitions, it's about mapping identities for firewall policies. Pretty sure, but let me know if anyone disagrees.
I think C . Not B, since that just covers AD, but realms here are mapped to the firewall VDC in FMC.
Definitely C here
Be respectful. No spam.