Azure Data Lake Storage supports access control lists (ACLs) at the file and folder level, allowing fine-grained control over access permissions. This is particularly useful for big data analytics workloads.
This is a trick question as both Azure Blob Storage & Azure Data Lake support ACL's at the file and directory level leveraging Security principal (user, group, service principal, or managed identity). Additionally, Azure Data Lake storage system is based on Azure Blob Storage system.
However Azure Data Lake Gen2, implements ACL differently in comparison to Azure Blob Storage, with the former supporting Azure RBAC & POSIX ACL's. Azure Blob Storage implements access control using SAS and AAD authentication.
So in my opinion, both A & C are correct.
A voting comment increases the vote count for the chosen answer by one.
Upvoting a comment with a selected answer will also increase the vote count towards that answer by one.
So if you see a comment that you already agree with, you can upvote it instead of posting a new comment.
svetlanam
Highly Voted 2 years, 10 months agoSwamy90572
Most Recent 3 weeks, 5 days agoman5484
1 month, 3 weeks agoTKC_2023
7 months agoAGTraining
1 year agoAZFabio
1 year, 6 months agosrgopalkr
1 year, 7 months agoHRKK
1 year, 8 months agoahmedkmj
1 year, 11 months agochiiiweiii
2 years agoJoanna0
2 years agoravick4u
2 years, 1 month agonilsoncarlosf
2 years, 3 months agoJA2018
2 years, 4 months agoAlbertopology
2 years, 5 months agoria97
2 years, 7 months agoBreeze21
2 years, 7 months ago