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Exam AZ-104 All Questions

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Exam AZ-104 topic 5 question 46 discussion

Actual exam question from Microsoft's AZ-104
Question #: 46
Topic #: 5
[All AZ-104 Questions]

You have Azure virtual machines that run Windows Server 2019 and are configured as shown in the following table.

You create a public Azure DNS zone named adatum.com and a private Azure DNS zone named contoso.com.
For controso.com, you create a virtual network link named link1 as shown in the exhibit. (Click the Exhibit tab.)

You discover that VM1 can resolve names in contoso.com but cannot resolve names in adatum.com. VM1 can resolve other hosts on the Internet.
You need to ensure that VM1 can resolve host names in adatum.com.
What should you do?

  • A. Update the DNS suffix on VM1 to be adatum.com
  • B. Configure the name servers for adatum.com at the domain registrar
  • C. Create an SRV record in the contoso.com zone
  • D. Modify the Access control (IAM) settings for link1
Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: B 🗳️

Comments

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mlantonis
Highly Voted 3 years, 5 months ago
Correct Answer: B Adatum.com is a public DNS zone. The Internet top level domain DNS servers need to know which DNS servers to direct DNS queries for adatum.com to. You configure this by configuring the name servers for adatum.com at the domain registrar.
upvoted 210 times
Slimus
1 year, 5 months ago
Answer is correct: B. However How do you know it's a public DNS zone? I can be private DNS too.
upvoted 1 times
ivan0590
1 year, 5 months ago
The question crearly states that adatum.com is a PUBLIC Azure DNS zone, while contoso.com is a PRIVATE Azure DNS zone. And the question is only asking about adatum.com, so it can't be a private DNS zone.
upvoted 6 times
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Moyuihftg
Highly Voted 3 years, 5 months ago
I think the answer should be B
upvoted 32 times
d0bermannn
3 years, 3 months ago
you are absolutely right
upvoted 3 times
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SeMo0o0o0o
Most Recent 3 weeks ago
Selected Answer: B
it´s B
upvoted 1 times
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summercat
6 months, 2 weeks ago
Ans is B Does Azure DNS support domain name registration? No. Azure DNS doesn't currently support the option to buy domain names. To buy domains, you must use a third-party domain name registrar. https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/dns/dns-faq
upvoted 1 times
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tashakori
7 months, 1 week ago
B is right
upvoted 1 times
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Hillah
1 year ago
Answer A because "VM1 can resolve other hosts on the Internet" yet it's not registered
upvoted 1 times
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NoobieWon
1 year, 1 month ago
What would you say the "Microsoft" answer is? If the Admin was to do option A is there no chance it would work?
upvoted 1 times
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Sri944
1 year, 3 months ago
I believe the correct answer is Option B. It is not true that using Azure Provided DNS automatically applies the appropriate DNS suffix to your virtual machines in Azure. When you use Azure Provided DNS, Azure automatically assigns DNS server IP addresses to your virtual network. However, it does not automatically apply the DNS suffix to your virtual machines.
upvoted 1 times
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Kimoz
1 year, 7 months ago
B is correct --A is not the correct answer because updating the DNS suffix on VM1 to adatum.com only affects the hostname resolution for that specific suffix, and it will not help to resolve names in the adatum.com zone.
upvoted 1 times
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Blippen
1 year, 9 months ago
Selected Answer: B
Correct Answer: B
upvoted 1 times
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HMO
2 years, 1 month ago
"For all other options you must either use Fully Qualified Domain Names (FQDN) or manually apply appropriate DNS suffix to your virtual machines" This one is for private DNS not for public DNS
upvoted 3 times
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EmnCours
2 years, 1 month ago
Selected Answer: B
Correct Answer: B
upvoted 1 times
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Lazylinux
2 years, 4 months ago
Selected Answer: B
I Luv Honey Because it is B Public DNS..you need create record for it @ your Domain Registrar..this is really NOT Azure question more of generic networking question
upvoted 6 times
Sheriff_of_beacon
2 years, 2 months ago
That joke never gets old :)
upvoted 3 times
Jaydude
1 year, 5 months ago
Oh yes it does!
upvoted 2 times
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AzureCrawler001
2 years, 4 months ago
Selected Answer: B
create DNS records for the domain name
upvoted 1 times
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josevirtual
2 years, 7 months ago
Selected Answer: B
You still need to register the domain. B is correct.
upvoted 2 times
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theorut
2 years, 7 months ago
You need a DNS forwarder to accomplish this but since there's no option given for that you need to choose for A - update the DNS suffix in VM1. Question is still vage.
upvoted 2 times
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pappkarcsiii
2 years, 8 months ago
Selected Answer: B
Correct Answer: B
upvoted 3 times
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A (35%)
C (25%)
B (20%)
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