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Confluent CCDAK Exam - Topic 1 Question 19 Discussion

Actual exam question for Confluent's CCDAK exam
Question #: 19
Topic #: 1
[All CCDAK Questions]

In Kafka, every broker... (select three)

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Suggested Answer: B, E, F

Kafka topics are divided into partitions and spread across brokers. Each brokers knows about all the metadata and each broker is a bootstrap broker, but only one of them is elected controller


Contribute your Thoughts:

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Lai
4 months ago
Isn't it surprising how they manage all that info?
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Virgilio
4 months ago
Yep, they are not controllers, just metadata holders.
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Lenna
4 months ago
Wait, I thought every broker had all the topics?
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Roosevelt
4 months ago
Totally agree, they only contain a subset of topics and partitions.
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Elbert
4 months ago
Brokers know all the metadata for topics and partitions.
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Alease
5 months ago
I thought every broker was a bootstrap broker, but now I'm confused about what that really means in this context.
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Margot
5 months ago
I practiced a question like this, and I feel like B and D are definitely correct, but I can't recall about the controller part.
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Evette
5 months ago
I remember something about brokers only having a subset of topics and partitions, so I might lean towards option F.
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Leota
5 months ago
I think brokers know the metadata for all topics and partitions, but I'm not sure if they contain all the topics.
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Tiera
5 months ago
I'm a bit confused by the JPA annotations part. I'll need to double-check my notes on how Spring Data JDBC works compared to JPA.
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Lenita
5 months ago
Okay, I think I've got it. The Standardized Service Contract principle is focused on standardizing things within a service contract, not across different service inventories. So B, the standardization of industry technologies across different service inventories, is the answer that doesn't represent a typical form of standardization addressed by this principle.
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Queenie
5 months ago
Hmm, this is a tough one. I'm not entirely sure what the right answer is, but I think it has to do with maintaining independence and avoiding any potential bias or conflicts of interest.
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