Q: 19
Refer to exhibit.
P-38
Refer to the exhibit. An engineer is configuring Cisco Data Center Network Manager to automate the provisioning of
Cisco Nexus 9000 Series Switches. The engineer must configure user access for network engineers to permit device
operations in Interface Manager. The solution must hide Admin and Config Menu items in Interface Manager Which
two roles must be assigned to the network engineers to meet these requirements? (Choose two.)
Refer to the exhibit. An engineer is configuring Cisco Data Center Network Manager to automate the provisioning of
Cisco Nexus 9000 Series Switches. The engineer must configure user access for network engineers to permit device
operations in Interface Manager. The solution must hide Admin and Config Menu items in Interface Manager Which
two roles must be assigned to the network engineers to meet these requirements? (Choose two.)Options
Discussion
B and D imo. Both grant device operation access in Interface Manager without showing Admin or Config menus, which is what the prompt wants. C is an easy mistake here since network-admin actually brings those extra menus up. Somebody disagree if you see it differently.
B and D make sense here, since network-operator and access-admin cover interface tasks without exposing the admin/config menus. C would show too much, including menu items the question wants hidden. Pretty sure this lines up with how DCNM role separation works, but correct me if not.
B and D tbh. Both roles let network engineers operate devices in Interface Manager but keep the Admin and Config stuff hidden, which matches the requirement. C is a common trap because network-admin gives more access than needed. Someone correct me if I'm missing a use case here.
C
B and D tbh
Call it B and D. network-operator plus access-admin let engineers work in Interface Manager without exposing Admin or Config menus, which is what the question asks. C looks tempting but would show too much, so that's likely a trap. Let me know if you see it another way.
Option B and D look right. network-operator and access-admin together give engineering enough access for device operations in Interface Manager but hide those Admin/Config menu options as required. C is tempting, but that’d expose too much. Anyone see it differently?
B tbh, saw a similar combo in some exam reports and it matches the Interface Manager access while hiding admin/config stuff.
Why not just B and D here? Hiding admin and config menus should be covered by those roles.
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