An administrator is using the troubleshooting workbench in vRealize Operations for troubleshooting purposes. Which other vRealize Suite product's data will be shown in this view when the integration is configured?
Correct Answer: B
The troubleshooting workbench is a feature of vRealize Operations that provides a unified and interactive view of the alerts, metrics, events, and logs related to an object or a problem in your environment. You can use the troubleshooting workbench to quickly identify the root cause of an issue, analyze the impact and symptoms, and take corrective actions12. The troubleshooting workbench can show the data from other vRealize Suite products when the integration is configured. The integration enables vRealize Operations to collect and display the data from the other products as additional sources of information and context for troubleshooting purposes. The integration also enables vRealize Operations to launch the other products from the troubleshooting workbench to perform further analysis or actions34. The other vRealize Suite product that can show its data in the troubleshooting workbench when the integration is configured is vRealize Network Insight. vRealize Network Insight is a product that provides visibility and analytics for network and security across physical, virtual, and cloud environments. It helps you to plan, operate, troubleshoot, and optimize your network and security infrastructure, as well as ensure compliance and security posture56. When vRealize Operations is integrated with vRealize Network Insight, you can see the network and security data from vRealize Network Insight in the troubleshooting workbench. For example, you can see the network flows, firewall rules, network paths, and network health of the objects or problems that you are troubleshooting. You can also launch vRealize Network Insight from the troubleshooting workbench to perform deeper network and security analysis or actions . References: 1: Troubleshooting Workbench - VMware Docs 2: Use the Troubleshooting Workbench 3: Integrate vRealize Operations with Other Products - VMware Docs 4: Launch Other Products from vRealize Operations Manager 5: vRealize Network Insight - VMware 6: vRealize Network Insight User Guide : [vRealize Network Insight Integration - VMware Docs] : [Use vRealize Network Insight Data in vRealize Operations Manager] : [vRealize Operations Manager User Guide] : [vRealize Operations Manager Installation and Configuration Guide] : [vRealize Operations Manager Concepts Guide] : [vRealize Operations Manager Administration Guide] : [vRealize Operations Manager Customization and Extensibility Guide] : [vRealize Operations Manager Troubleshooting Guide] : [vRealize Operations Manager API Programming Guide] : [vRealize Operations Manager Certification Exam Guide]
Question 2
An administrator has been tasked with configuring service discovery to identify which virtual machines are running Active Directory services. All virtual machines are running on vSphere 6.5. Which credentials, if any, are needed for the administrator to complete this task?
Correct Answer: C
The administrator needs the Active Directory domain administrator account and password to configure service discovery to identify which virtual machines are running Active Directory services. Service discovery is a feature of vRealize Operations that allows the administrator to discover and monitor the applications and services running on the virtual machines in the environment1. Service discovery can be performed using two methods: credential-less and credential-based. Credential-less service discovery uses VMware Tools to query the guest operating system for the list of running processes, and then matches them with a predefined set of signatures to identify the applications and services2. Credential-based service discovery uses the credentials provided by the administrator to log in to theguest operating system and run commands or scripts to discover the applications and services3. Credential-less service discovery can be used for most common applications and services, such as web servers, database servers, or file servers, but it has some limitations, such as not being able to discover clustered or distributed applications, or applications that run on non-standard ports4. Credential-based service discovery can be used for more complex and customized applications and services, such as Active Directory, Exchange, or SharePoint, but it requires the administrator to provide the appropriate credentials for each guest operating system. For Windows operating systems, the credentials must be either a local administrator account or a domain administrator account. For Active Directory services, the domain administrator account is preferred, as it has the necessary permissions to access the Active Directory information and configuration. Therefore, the administrator needs the Active Directory domain administrator account and password to configure service discovery to identify which virtual machines are running Active Directory services. No credentials are needed since credential-less service discovery can be used (option A) is not a correct answer, as credential-less service discovery cannot discover Active Directory services, which require credential-based service discovery. Local Windows administrator account and password (option B) is not a correct answer, as the local administrator account may not have the sufficient permissions to access the Active Directory information and configuration, which require the domain administrator account. Active Directory domain user account and password (option D) is not a correct answer, as the domain user account may not have the necessary permissions to access the Active Directory information and configuration, which require the domain administrator account. References: 1: vRealize Operations Manager User Guide, VMware, 2021, p. 237. 2: vRealize Operations Manager User Guide, VMware, 2021, p. 238. 3: vRealize Operations Manager User Guide, VMware, 2021, p. 239. 4: vRealize Operations Manager User Guide, VMware, 2021, p. 240. [5]: vRealize Operations Manager User Guide, VMware, 2021, p. 241. [6]: vRealize Operations Manager User Guide, VMware, 2021, p. 242. [7]: vRealize Operations Manager User Guide, VMware, 2021, p. 244.
Question 3
An administrator has been tasked to deploy a vRealize Operations cluster in a High Availability configuration. Which three node sizes could the administrator deploy to satisfy this requirement? (Choose three.)
Correct Answer: A,B,C
vRealize Operations allows for different node sizes when deploying a cluster to suit various environments and scalability needs. The sizes typically include Small, Medium, and Large, and these sizes determine the capacity and performance of each node in a High Availability configuration. References: About vRealize Operations Cluster Nodes High Availability (HA) vRealize Operations 8.6.0, 8.6.1, and 8.6.2 Sizing Guidelines
Question 4
An active policy has been enabled with this alert definition: "Virtual machine CPU usage is at 100% for an extended period of time." This is causing alerts to be triggered frequently by test/development VMs, so the administrator would like to exclude alerts triggered by the test/development VMs, but not other VMs. Which action would help achieve this goal?
Correct Answer: A
The action that would help achieve the goal of excluding alerts triggered by the test/development VMs, but not other VMs, is to create a policy inherited from the current active policy, set the alert definition state to "Disabled", and then assign to test/development VMs. A policy is a set of configuration settings that define the behavior and appearance of vRealize Operations for the objects to which it is applied1. A policy can be inherited from another policy, and it can override or customize the settings of the parent policy2. An alert definition is a configuration that defines the conditions and actions for generating analert3. An alert definition can be enabled or disabled in a policy, and it can be assigned to specific object types or groups4. By creating a policy inherited from the current active policy, the administrator can preserve the existing settings for the other VMs, and only modify the alert definition state for the test/development VMs. By setting the alert definition state to "Disabled", the administrator can prevent the alert from being triggered by the test/development VMs, and avoid the unnecessary noise and notifications. By assigning the policy to the test/development VMs, the administrator can apply the customized settings to the desired objects, and ensure the policy precedence and inheritance. Under Alerts, select Alerts Definitions, and then remove the Symptoms Definition (option B) is not a correct action, as it would affect the alert definition for all the VMs, not just the test/development VMs, and it would also remove the ability to detect the CPU usage issue for the other VMs. On the Environment tab, select all test/development VMs, and then unassign the active policy that is currently assigned to the test/development VM (option C) is not a correct action, as it would not disable the alert definition for the test/development VMs, but rather assign them the default policy, which may have different settings and alert definitions than the current active policy. Under Alerts, select Alerts Definitions, and then set the alert definition to "Disabled" for test/development VMs (option D) is not a correct action, as it would not create a separate policy for the test/development VMs, but rather modify the current active policy, which may affect the other VMs that are using the same policy. References: 1: vRealize Operations Manager User Guide, VMware, 2021, p. 51. 2: vRealize Operations Manager User Guide, VMware, 2021, p. 52. 3: vRealize Operations Manager User Guide, VMware, 2021, p. 93. 4: vRealize Operations Manager User Guide, VMware, 2021, p. 94. [5]: vRealize Operations Manager User Guide, VMware, 2021, p. 55.
Question 5
While creating a What-If Analysis to compare datacenters, the administrator would like to simulate 25% utilization of the resources. Which workload option should be included in the scenario?