You are creating a new application and require access to Cloud SQL from VPC instances without public IP addresses.
Which two actions should you take? (Choose two.)
Your software team is developing an on-premises web application that requires direct connectivity to Compute Engine Instances in GCP using the RFC 1918 address space. You want to choose a connectivity solution from your on-premises environment to GCP, given these specifications:
* Your ISP is a Google Partner Interconnect provider.
* Your on-premises VPN device's internet uplink and downlink speeds are 10 Gbps.
* A test VPN connection between your on-premises gateway and GCP is performing at a maximum speed of 500 Mbps due to packet losses.
* Most of the data transfer will be from GCP to the on-premises environment.
* The application can burst up to 1.5 Gbps during peak transfers over the Interconnect.
* Cost and the complexity of the solution should be minimal.
How should you provision the connectivity solution?
Your company's Google Cloud-deployed, streaming application supports multiple languages. The application development team has asked you how they should support splitting audio and video traffic to different backend Google Cloud storage buckets. They want to use URL maps and minimize operational overhead. They are currently using the following directory structure:
/fr/video
/en/video
/es/video
/../video
/fr/audio
/en/audio
/es/audio
/../audio
Which solution should you recommend?
You need to restrict access to your Google Cloud load-balanced application so that only specific IP addresses can connect.
What should you do?
One instance in your VPC is configured to run with a private IP address only. You want to ensure that even if this instance is deleted, its current private IP address will not be automatically assigned to a different instance.
In the GCP Console, what should you do?
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