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Microsoft AZ-801 Exam - Topic 14 Question 39 Discussion

Actual exam question for Microsoft's AZ-801 exam
Question #: 39
Topic #: 14
[All AZ-801 Questions]

You have two Azure virtual networks named Vnet1 and Vnet2.

You have a Windows 10 device named Client1 that connects to Vnet1 by using a Point-to-Site (P2S) IKEv2 VPN.

You implement virtual network peering between Vnet1 and Vnet2. Vnet1 allows gateway transit Vnet2 can use the remote gateway.

You discover that Client1 cannot communicate with Vnet2.

You need to ensure that Client1 can communicate with Vnet2.

Solution: You resize the gateway of Vnet1 to a larger SKU.

Does this meet the goal?

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: B

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Raylene
3 months ago
I’m surprised this is even a suggestion, it’s not the right solution!
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Linsey
4 months ago
No way, the problem is with the P2S setup, not the SKU.
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Deeanna
4 months ago
Wait, I thought resizing would help with performance?
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Maryanne
4 months ago
Totally agree, it's about routing, not the gateway size.
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Glenn
4 months ago
Resizing the gateway won't fix the communication issue.
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Terina
4 months ago
I’m uncertain, but I think the problem might be related to the peering settings or routing rather than just the gateway size.
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Glynda
5 months ago
I feel like the gateway SKU change could help, but it seems more like a workaround than a solution to the actual communication issue.
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Dalene
5 months ago
I think I saw a similar question where the solution involved checking the routing settings. Resizing the gateway might not be the right answer here.
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Rolland
5 months ago
I remember reading that resizing the gateway could help with performance, but I'm not sure if it directly affects communication between the two VNets.
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Felix
5 months ago
I'm a little confused by this question. I know dacryocystitis has to do with the eye, but I can't recall the specific structure that's affected. I'll have to make an educated guess on this one.
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Coletta
5 months ago
Conducting the transfer and then notifying OFAC seems risky. I'll go with blocking it to be on the safe side.
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