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SAP Exam C_DS_43 Topic 6 Question 3 Discussion

Actual exam question for SAP's C_DS_43 exam
Question #: 3
Topic #: 6
[All C_DS_43 Questions]

You execute a job with Enable Recovery activated. One of the data flows in the job raises an

exception that interrupts the execution. You run the job again with Recover from Last Failed

Execution enabled.

What happens to the data flow that raised the exception during the first execution?

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: D

Contribute your Thoughts:

Lawanda
12 months ago
Agreed. It's always best to resolve any errors before attempting to recover from a failed execution.
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Javier
12 months ago
So it's important to identify and fix the issue in the data flow before re-executing the job.
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Alton
12 months ago
Haha, I hope the data flow doesn't randomly start dancing or something. That would be a real plot twist!
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Tamesha
12 months ago
I bet the data flow will be skipped, but I wonder if it will leave any traces behind, like partial data or error logs. Could be useful to investigate.
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Kenneth
11 months ago
I think it might leave some error logs behind, we should check that out.
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Graham
11 months ago
It will be skipped and the job will continue from the last failed execution.
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Elizabeth
12 months ago
In that case, the job may fail again if the issue is not resolved before running it with Recover from Last Failed Execution enabled.
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Ronnie
1 years ago
But what if the data flow that raised the exception is critical for the job?
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Blondell
1 years ago
Hmm, I wonder if the data flow will be retried or if it will just be ignored completely. Guess I'll have to read the documentation more carefully.
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Lonna
11 months ago
The job will continue from where it left off.
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Anika
12 months ago
It will be retried from the point of failure.
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Odelia
1 years ago
Yes, that's correct. The job will skip the data flow that raised the exception and continue from the next step.
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Martina
1 years ago
The data flow that raised the exception will be skipped during the second execution. This is the purpose of the Recover from Last Failed Execution feature, right?
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Whitley
12 months ago
Exactly, it saves time and resources by only focusing on the failed part of the job.
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Pamela
12 months ago
It helps to continue the job from where it left off, without having to rerun the entire job.
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Freeman
1 years ago
Yes, that's correct. The data flow that raised the exception will be skipped in the second execution.
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Lashaunda
1 years ago
I think the data flow will continue from where it left off.
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Kerry
1 years ago
In that case, we need to review the overall job design and maybe consider adding error handling to prevent the same exception from happening again.
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Estrella
1 years ago
But what if the data flow that failed is critical for the job? Will it just be ignored?
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Jeanice
1 years ago
Yes, that's correct. The job will continue from the last successful execution point, skipping the failed data flow.
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Tegan
1 years ago
I think the data flow that raised the exception will be skipped during the second execution.
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