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CyberArk SECRET-SEN Exam - Topic 1 Question 4 Discussion

Actual exam question for CyberArk's SECRET-SEN exam
Question #: 4
Topic #: 1
[All SECRET-SEN Questions]

A customer has 100 .NET applications and wants to use Summon to invoke the application and inject secrets at run time.

Which change to the NET application code might be necessary to enable this?

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: B

Contribute your Thoughts:

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Marica
4 months ago
I’m not sure about C, feels like something would break without changes.
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Erick
4 months ago
D is definitely a must, can't forget that API key!
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Freeman
4 months ago
C sounds too good to be true, are no changes really needed?
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Thurman
4 months ago
I think B is the way to go, config files are easier.
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Reiko
4 months ago
Option A seems right, gotta include those REST API calls!
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Elena
5 months ago
I vaguely remember something about needing an API key for Summon, but I can't remember if it's for accessing secrets or something else.
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Harrison
5 months ago
I feel like I read that Summon handles the connection automatically, so maybe no changes are needed? That seems too easy though.
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Eleonora
5 months ago
I think I saw a practice question that mentioned using environment variables for secrets, but I can't recall if that's the best approach here.
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Bettyann
5 months ago
I remember something about needing to modify the code to make API calls for secrets, but I'm not sure if that's the only option.
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Deangelo
5 months ago
I'm a bit confused by this question. It seems like there could be multiple ways to approach it, depending on how the .NET application is currently set up to handle secrets. I'm not sure if I fully understand the capabilities of Summon and how it integrates with .NET apps. I might need to ask the instructor for some clarification before attempting to answer this.
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Dick
5 months ago
Hmm, I'm a little unsure about this one. I'm trying to understand how Summon works and how it interacts with the .NET application. I'm not sure if the application would need to be changed or if Summon can handle that automatically. I might need to review the Summon documentation again.
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Brandon
5 months ago
This seems like a pretty straightforward question. I think the answer is B - the application would need to be changed to access secrets from a configuration file or environment variable so that Summon can inject them at runtime.
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Jacquline
5 months ago
Okay, I think I've got this. The key here is that Summon is designed to inject secrets at runtime, so the application doesn't need to be changed to make REST API calls or anything like that. The answer is C - no changes are needed, as Summon will handle the connection to the backend data source.
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Maryrose
5 months ago
Alright, let me think this through. I need to access the log, filter for the update events, and then verify the rollback. Sounds like a solid plan. I've got this!
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