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Arcitura Education S90.18 Exam - Topic 4 Question 56 Discussion

Actual exam question for Arcitura Education's S90.18 exam
Question #: 56
Topic #: 4
[All S90.18 Questions]

Which of the following design options can help reduce the amount of runtime processing required by security logic within a service composition?

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Suggested Answer: B

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Chantell
4 months ago
Not sure about that, isn’t encryption usually resource-heavy?
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Dick
4 months ago
Definitely agree with option A, encryption is key!
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Mike
4 months ago
Wait, does non-repudiation really help with runtime processing?
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Hildred
4 months ago
I think using a shared identity store makes more sense.
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Estrella
4 months ago
A single sign-on mechanism can really streamline things!
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Dacia
5 months ago
Non-repudiation seems important, but I don't see how it directly reduces runtime processing. Maybe it's more about ensuring trust rather than efficiency?
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Refugia
5 months ago
I'm a bit confused about the role of XML-Encryption and XML-Signature in this context. Wouldn't they actually add more processing overhead?
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Misty
5 months ago
I remember practicing a question similar to this, and I think introducing a shared identity store makes sense to reduce redundancy in security checks.
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Filiberto
5 months ago
I think using a single sign-on mechanism could really help streamline the security process, but I'm not entirely sure if it's the best option here.
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Cammy
5 months ago
I'm a bit unsure about some of the other log options listed. PMconsole.log and ITAlog.log don't seem directly relevant to the issue at hand. I'll stick with the top 3 that seem most likely to help.
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Nickole
5 months ago
Alright, I think I've got this. The key is to use the netconfig command to set the IP address based on my station number, which should be in the 172.24.0.0/16 network. Then I just need to make sure I have the right subnet mask and gateway, and I should be able to ping the 172.25.254.254 server. Sounds straightforward enough, but I'll double-check my work before submitting.
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Talia
5 months ago
I'm a bit unsure about this one. I know the standard input is typically used for user input, but I'm not sure if that means the keyboard specifically. Let me think this through a bit more.
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