A company wants to set up a backup data center that can become active during a disaster. The site needs to contain network equipment and connectivity. Which of the following strategies should the company employ?
I would go for B. Active-active refers to more than one NIC being active at the same time. In my opinion, this question is referring to a recovery site (hot, warm, cold, cloud)
This feels like a confusing question. OK says network equipment so cloud is not the right answer. says active "during a disaster" that implies a hot site but no data being backed up and not an option. Active active would technically cover that but doesn't say it want in online before hand. so Warm is the best answer from this intentionally poorly worded question.
I was inclined to go with B at first. However, if you read and consider the nuance of the wording of the question, the fact that it needs to provide back up DURING a disaster and not FOLLOWING a disaster lead me to change my answer to A. It also says it needs to have connectivity. A warm site is ready to be connected on demand, active-active suggests it is already connected.
The Active-Active failover architecture duplicates complete FME Server installations on separate servers. In other words, all components reside on the same system, and additional systems are configured similarly and provide similar functionality. A third-party load balancer directs incoming traffic to one of the available systems. When requests are directed to any of the systems, they are handled independently and only by one system. This approach works well with a cloud-based computing environment, such as Amazon Web Services, in which machines can be cloned easily to expand capacity.
https://docs.safe.com/fme/2017.0/html/FME_Server_Documentation/Content/AdminGuide/Active-Active-Architecture.htm#:~:text=The%20Active%2DActive%20failover%20architecture,similarly%20and%20provide%20similar%20functionality.
A warm-warm site is used to restore the network in a short amount of time (under a week).
B. Warm
A "warm" site is a disaster recovery strategy where the backup data center contains network equipment and connectivity but may not have current data or applications running. In the event of a disaster, the warm site can become active more quickly than a "cold" site, which typically starts from scratch, but it may take some time to bring all systems and data fully online. The "active-active" strategy typically involves running parallel systems in both the primary and backup data centers at the same time, which is not always feasible or cost-effective for all organizations.
A warm site strategy is a suitable choice for a company that wants to set up a backup data center for disaster recovery purposes, with network equipment and connectivity already in place. A warm site is a compromise between an active-active site and a cold site. In a warm site, essential hardware and network equipment are pre-installed, and connectivity is available. However, the site is not running live operations like an active-active site. During a disaster, the warm site can quickly become operational, but it may take some time to restore the most recent data and synchronize the systems. An active-active site would involve two or more fully operational sites running simultaneously, which may be unnecessary and expensive for this scenario.
in the question it is clearly saying facility dose not have network devices and no connection . it is clearly a cold site because to be a warm site network devices should be there just need connection. so my thought it is a cold site where you will need to set up the new device and internet connection to be operate. please correct me if i am wrong .,
From CertMaster
Site resiliency is described as hot, warm, or cold:
A hot site can failover almost immediately. It generally means that the site is already within the organization's ownership and is ready to deploy. For example, a hot site could consist of a building with operational computer equipment that is kept updated with a live data set.
A warm site could be similar, but with the requirement that the latest data set will need to be loaded.
A cold site takes longer to set up. A cold site may be an empty building with a lease agreement in place to install whatever equipment is required when necessary.
You actually couldn't be more wrong. The question specifically states that the the data center will only be active during a disaster. So you don't even really have to know what they're talking about when they say "active-active" to know it's wrong.
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