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VMware 3V0-32.23 Exam - Topic 3 Question 3 Discussion

Actual exam question for VMware's 3V0-32.23 exam
Question #: 3
Topic #: 3
[All 3V0-32.23 Questions]

An architect is designing a VMware Aria Operations for Logs cluster for an organization. The organization has the following requirements:

No requirement for archival data

Support a log data retention period of 14days

How will the log data be handled in this VMware Aria Operations for Logs cluster after the 14-day retention period?

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: B

VMware Aria Operations for Logs automatically deletes log data older than the defined retention period (in this case, 14 days) using a first-come-first-retired method, ensuring compliance with the retention policy without manual intervention.


Contribute your Thoughts:

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Tran
2 months ago
Wait, no archival data at all? That’s risky!
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Rosendo
2 months ago
D) seems unlikely, least accessed might not be efficient.
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Wilda
3 months ago
A) is correct, old logs get deleted based on age.
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Yuki
3 months ago
I think B) makes more sense, first-come-first-retired sounds fair.
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Jeannine
3 months ago
C) is a hassle, who wants to manually delete logs?
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Sylvia
3 months ago
I feel like manual deletion isn't a common practice in these systems, so I doubt option C is correct.
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Larae
4 months ago
I’m a bit confused; I thought logs were usually deleted based on access frequency, but I can't recall if that's the case here.
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Agustin
4 months ago
I think we practiced a question similar to this, and it was about how logs are retired. I feel like option A might be the right choice.
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Alease
4 months ago
I remember something about automatic deletion in log management, but I'm not sure if it's based on age or access.
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Shaun
4 months ago
I'm leaning towards option D. Retiring logs on a least accessed basis could help ensure the most critical data is retained, even if it's older than 14 days. But I'd want to understand more about how that works in practice.
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Yuki
4 months ago
Based on the requirements, I think option B is the way to go. Automatic periodic retirement of old logs on a first-in, first-out basis seems like the cleanest and most straightforward solution here.
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Rickie
5 months ago
Option A sounds like the easiest approach, but I'm not sure if that's the most efficient way to manage the log data. I'd want to double-check the details on how that variable-sized chunk deletion works.
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Caitlin
5 months ago
I'm a bit confused by this question. Is there a specific reason why archival data is not required? Wouldn't option D, retiring on a least accessed basis, be better to ensure the most important logs are retained?
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Wynell
5 months ago
I think option B makes the most sense here. Automatically retiring old log messages on a first-come-first-retired basis seems like the best way to handle the 14-day retention requirement without any need for manual intervention.
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