최신VMware Advanced Deploy VMware NSX-T Data Center 3.X - 3V0-41.22무료샘플문제
문제1
SIMULATION
Task 16
You are working to automate your NSX-T deployment and an automation engineer would like to retrieve your BOP routing information from the API.
You need to:
* Run the GET call in the API using Postman
* Save output to the desktop to a text file called API.txt
Complete the requested task.
Notes: Passwords are contained in the user _ readme.txt. This task is not dependent on another. This task should take approximately 5 minutes to complete.
SIMULATION
Task 16
You are working to automate your NSX-T deployment and an automation engineer would like to retrieve your BOP routing information from the API.
You need to:
* Run the GET call in the API using Postman
* Save output to the desktop to a text file called API.txt
Complete the requested task.
Notes: Passwords are contained in the user _ readme.txt. This task is not dependent on another. This task should take approximately 5 minutes to complete.
정답:
See the Explanation part of the Complete Solution and step by step instructions Explanation:
To run the GET call in the API using Postman and save the output to the desktop to a text file called API.txt, you need to follow these steps:
Open Postman and create a new request tab. Select GET as the method from the drop-down menu.
Enter the URL of the NSX-T Policy API endpoint for retrieving the BGP routing table, such as https://<nsx-manager-ip-address>/policy/api/v1/infra/tier-0s/vmc/routing-table?enforcement_point_path=/infra/sites/default/enforcement-points/vmc-enforcementpoint Click the Authorization tab and select Basic Auth as the type from the drop-down menu. Enter your NSX-T username and password in the Username and Password fields, such as admin and VMware1!.
Click Send to execute the request and view the response in the Body tab. You should see a JSON object with the BGP routing table information, such as routes, next hops, prefixes, etc.
Click Save Response and select Save to a file from the drop-down menu. Enter API.txt as the file name and choose Desktop as the location. Click Save to save the output to your desktop.
You have successfully run the GET call in the API using Postman and saved the output to your desktop to a text file called API.txt.
To run the GET call in the API using Postman and save the output to the desktop to a text file called API.txt, you need to follow these steps:
Open Postman and create a new request tab. Select GET as the method from the drop-down menu.
Enter the URL of the NSX-T Policy API endpoint for retrieving the BGP routing table, such as https://<nsx-manager-ip-address>/policy/api/v1/infra/tier-0s/vmc/routing-table?enforcement_point_path=/infra/sites/default/enforcement-points/vmc-enforcementpoint Click the Authorization tab and select Basic Auth as the type from the drop-down menu. Enter your NSX-T username and password in the Username and Password fields, such as admin and VMware1!.
Click Send to execute the request and view the response in the Body tab. You should see a JSON object with the BGP routing table information, such as routes, next hops, prefixes, etc.
Click Save Response and select Save to a file from the drop-down menu. Enter API.txt as the file name and choose Desktop as the location. Click Save to save the output to your desktop.
You have successfully run the GET call in the API using Postman and saved the output to your desktop to a text file called API.txt.
문제2
SIMULATION
Task 14
An administrator has seen an abundance of alarms regarding high CPU usage on the NSX Managers. The administrator has successfully cleared these alarms numerous times in the past and is aware of the issue. The administrator feels that the number of alarms being produced for these events is overwhelming the log files.
You need to:
* Review CPU Sensitivity and Threshold values.
Complete the requested task.
Notes: Passwords are contained in the user_readme.txt. This task is not dependent on other tasks. This task should take approximately 5 minutes to complete.
SIMULATION
Task 14
An administrator has seen an abundance of alarms regarding high CPU usage on the NSX Managers. The administrator has successfully cleared these alarms numerous times in the past and is aware of the issue. The administrator feels that the number of alarms being produced for these events is overwhelming the log files.
You need to:
* Review CPU Sensitivity and Threshold values.
Complete the requested task.
Notes: Passwords are contained in the user_readme.txt. This task is not dependent on other tasks. This task should take approximately 5 minutes to complete.
정답:
See the Explanation part of the Complete Solution and step by step instructions Explanation:
To review CPU sensitivity and threshold values, you need to follow these steps:
Log in to the NSX Manager UI with admin credentials. The default URL is https://<nsx-manager-ip-address>.
Navigate to System > Settings > System Settings > CPU and Memory Thresholds.
You will see the current values for CPU and memory thresholds for NSX Manager, NSX Controller, and NSX Edge. These values determine the percentage of CPU and memory usage that will trigger an alarm on the NSX Manager UI.
You can modify the default threshold values by clicking Edit and entering new values in the text boxes. For example, you can increase the CPU threshold for NSX Manager from 80% to 90% to reduce the number of alarms for high CPU usage. Click Save to apply the changes.
You can also view the historical data for CPU and memory usage for each component by clicking View Usage History. You can select a time range and a granularity level to see the usage trends and patterns over time
To review CPU sensitivity and threshold values, you need to follow these steps:
Log in to the NSX Manager UI with admin credentials. The default URL is https://<nsx-manager-ip-address>.
Navigate to System > Settings > System Settings > CPU and Memory Thresholds.
You will see the current values for CPU and memory thresholds for NSX Manager, NSX Controller, and NSX Edge. These values determine the percentage of CPU and memory usage that will trigger an alarm on the NSX Manager UI.
You can modify the default threshold values by clicking Edit and entering new values in the text boxes. For example, you can increase the CPU threshold for NSX Manager from 80% to 90% to reduce the number of alarms for high CPU usage. Click Save to apply the changes.
You can also view the historical data for CPU and memory usage for each component by clicking View Usage History. You can select a time range and a granularity level to see the usage trends and patterns over time