You need to provision the resources in Azure to support the virtual machine that will be migrated from the New York office.
What should you include in the solution? To answer, select the appropriate options in the answer area.
NOTE: Each correct selection is worth one point.


Explanation

Box 1: 10.20.0.0/16
Scenario: The New York office an IP address of 10.0.0.0/16. The Los Angeles office uses an IP address space of 10.10.0.0/16.
Box 2: Storage (general purpose v1)
Scenario: The New York office has a virtual machine named VM1 that has the vSphere console installed.
You have an Azure subscription named Subscription1.
You have a virtualization environment that contains the virtualization servers in the following table.

The virtual machines are configured as shown in the following table.

All the virtual machines use basic disks. VM1 is protected by using BitLocker Drive Encryption (BitLocker).
You plan to use Azure Site Recovery to migrate the virtual machines to Azure.
Which virtual machines can you migrate? To answer, select the appropriate options in the answer area.
NOTE: Each correct selection is worth one point.


Explanation

References:
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/site-recovery/hyper-v-azure-support-matrix#azure-vm-requirements
You have an Azure subscription that contains a virtual machine named VM1. VM1 hosts a line-of-business application that is available 24 hours a day. VM1 has one network interface and one managed disk. VM1 uses the D4s v3 size.
You plan to make the following changes to VM1:
* Change the size to D8s v3.
* Add a 500-GB managed disk.
* Add the Puppet Agent extension.
* Attach an additional network interface.
Which change will cause downtime for VM1?
You have peering configured as shown in the following exhibit.

Use the drop-down menus to select the answer choice that completes each statement based on the information presented in the graphic.
NOTE: Each correct selection is worth one point.


Explanation

Box 1: vNET6 only
Box 2: Modify the address space
The virtual networks you peer must have non-overlapping IP address spaces.
References:
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/virtual-network/virtual-network-manage-peering#requirements-and-const
Your company recently hired a user named [email protected].
You need to ensure that janet-7509087@ ExamUsers.com can connect to load balancer named Web-LAB. The solution must ensure that janet-7509087@ ExamUsers.com can modify the backend pools.
What should you do from the Azure portal?
Explanation
Step 1:
In the navigation list, choose Load Balancer.

Step 2:
Locate the load balancer named Web-ALB, and click the Access icon.
Step3:
In the Users blade, click Roles. In the Roles blade, click Add to add permissions for the user [email protected].
Step 4:
Add permission to modify backend pools
References:
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/azure-stack/azure-stack-manage-permissions
You plan to deploy a site-to-site VPN connection from on-premises network to your Azure environment. The VPN connection will be established to the VNET01-USEA2 virtual network.
You need to create the required resources in Azure for the planned site-to-site VPN. The solution must minimize costs.
What should you do from the Azure portal?
NOTE: This task may a very long time to complete. You do NOT need to wait for the deployment to complete this task successfully.
Explanation
We create a VPN gateway.
Step 1:
On the left side of the portal page, click + and type 'Virtual Network Gateway' in search. In Results, locate and click Virtual network gateway.
Step 2:
At the bottom of the 'Virtual network gateway' page, click Create. This opens the Create virtual network gateway page.
Step 3:
On the Create virtual network gateway page, specify the values for your virtual network gateway.
Gateway type: Select VPN. VPN gateways use the virtual network gateway type VPN.
Virtual network: Choose the existing virtual network VNET01-USEA2
Gateway subnet address range: You will only see this setting if you did not previously create a gateway subnet for your virtual network.
Step 4:
Select the default values for the other setting, and click create.

The settings are validated and you'll see the "Deploying Virtual network gateway" tile on the dashboard.
Creating a gateway can take up to 45 minutes.
Note: This task may take a very long time to complete. You do NOT need to wait for the deployment to complete this task successfully.
References:
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/vpn-gateway/vpn-gateway-howto-site-to-site-resource-manager-portal
You have an Azure subscription that is used by four departments in your company. The subscription contains
10 resource groups. Each department uses resources in several resource groups.
You need to send a report to the finance department. The report must detail the costs for each department.
Which three actions should you perform in sequence? To answer, move the appropriate actions from the list of actions to the answer area and arrange them in the correct order.


Explanation

Box 1: Assign a tag to each resource.
You apply tags to your Azure resources giving metadata to logically organize them into a taxonomy. After you apply tags, you can retrieve all the resources in your subscription with that tag name and value. Each resource or resource group can have a maximum of 15 tag name/value pairs. Tags applied to the resource group are not inherited by the resources in that resource group.
Box 2: From the Cost analysis blade, filter the view by tag
After you get your services running, regularly check how much they're costing you. You can see the current spend and burn rate in Azure portal.
* Visit the Subscriptions blade in Azure portal and select a subscription.
* You should see the cost breakdown and burn rate in the popup blade.
* Click Cost analysis in the list to the left to see the cost breakdown by resource. Wait 24 hours after you add a service for the data to populate.
* You can filter by different properties like tags, resource group, and timespan. Click Apply to confirm the filters and Download if you want to export the view to a Comma-Separated Values (.csv) file.
Box 3: Download the usage report
References:
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/azure-resource-manager/resource-group-using-tags
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/billing/billing-getting-started
You have a Microsoft SQL Server Always On availability group on Azure virtual machines. You need to configure an Azure internal load balancer as a listener for the availability group. What should you do?