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Adobe AD0-E706 Exam - Topic 5 Question 63 Discussion

Actual exam question for Adobe's AD0-E706 exam
Question #: 63
Topic #: 5
[All AD0-E706 Questions]

To secure composer credentials you want to remove the auch. Json file from the project repository How do you do that?

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Suggested Answer: B

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Joaquin
7 days ago
Option C is risky. Better to avoid hardcoding credentials.
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Kerrie
12 days ago
I'm confused. Why not just use option A?
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Vashti
17 days ago
I agree, but option D sounds good too. Sensitive option is key.
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Delila
22 days ago
I think option B is the best choice. It keeps credentials secure.
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Launa
27 days ago
I disagree, option A is outdated thinking.
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Ivory
1 month ago
Isn't it risky to expose any credentials at all?
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Daniel
1 month ago
Wait, you mean I can't just delete the auth.json file? That's the easiest solution!
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Mi
1 month ago
Option D sounds like the most secure solution. Enabling the sensitive option is crucial for protecting those credentials.
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Odette
2 months ago
Option C is the way to go. Keeping the credentials in a secure location on the build server is the safest approach.
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Marg
2 months ago
I’m a bit confused about the options, but I remember that keeping sensitive data out of the repository is important. Maybe option A is not the best approach?
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Tien
2 months ago
I practiced a similar question where we had to manage credentials, and I think putting them in a specific directory like in option C could be a solution too.
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Viki
2 months ago
Wait, are we really supposed to keep credentials in a file?
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Paz
2 months ago
I think option B is the best way to go.
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Edward
2 months ago
The auth.json file should never be committed to the repository. Option B seems like the best way to handle this.
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Carlee
3 months ago
Haha, option A is a joke, right? Storing passwords in plain text is a big no-no.
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Nichelle
3 months ago
Option D sounds like a solid choice for security.
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Gussie
3 months ago
I'm not entirely sure, but I feel like option D sounds familiar. It might be about adding sensitive variables, but I can't recall the details.
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Latrice
3 months ago
I think I remember something about environment variables being used to secure credentials, so maybe option B is the right choice?
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Arlene
4 months ago
I've dealt with this kind of issue before. I think Option D is the way to go - adding the composer_auth variable with the sensitive option enabled. That should keep the credentials secure while still allowing the build process to access them.
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Anglea
4 months ago
Okay, let's think this through step-by-step. The goal is to remove the auth.json file from the project repository, so that the credentials aren't exposed. Option C seems like the most straightforward solution, but I'll need to double-check the details.
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Vince
4 months ago
Hmm, this is an interesting one. I think the key here is to find a way to securely store the composer credentials without having them in the project repository. Option B looks promising, but I'm not sure if that's the best approach.
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Dean
4 months ago
I'm not sure about this one. The question seems a bit confusing, and I'm not familiar with the specifics of managing composer credentials. I'll need to read through the options carefully and think it through.
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Andree
1 day ago
I think option B makes sense. It keeps things secure.
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