Should be N N Y:
"Storage accounts have a default access tier setting that indicates the online tier in which a new blob is created. The default access tier setting can be set to either _hot or cool_."
agree. The account access tier is the default tier that is inferred by any blob without an explicitly set tier. The hot access tier is ideal for frequently accessed data, and the cool access tier is ideal for infrequently accessed data. The archive access tier can only be set at the blob level and not on the account.
You're paying for questions, not answers. It doesn't make it any less worse, but this is basically the easiest way to prepare for the exams alone. It's still up to you to study and know personally the material.
Only storage accounts that are configured for LRS, GRS, or RA-GRS support moving blobs to the archive tier. The archive tier isn't supported for ZRS, GZRS, or RA-GZRS accounts
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/storage/blobs/access-tiers-overview#archive-access-tier
Should be N N Y:
"A blob that doesn't have an explicitly assigned tier infers its tier from the default account access tier setting. If a blob's access tier is inferred from the default account access tier setting, then the Azure portal displays the access tier as Hot (inferred), Cool (inferred), or Cold (inferred)." From https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/storage/blobs/access-tiers-overview
Archive tier is not mentioned when going through default access tiers because it has to be specified "By calling the Set Blob Tier operation, either directly or via a lifecycle management policy." From the same doc.
NNY. The archive access tier for Azure Storage cannot be set at the account level. It can only be set at the blob level
Hot, cool, and archive tiers can be set at the blob level
The Archive Tier has the lowest storage cost of them all
Hot Tier: Storage Cost: Highest / Access Cost: Lowest
Cool Tier: Storage Cost: Medium / Access Cost: Medium
Archive Tier: Storage Cost: Lowest/ Access Cost: Highest
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/storage/blobs/access-tiers-overview
3rd: YES. To explicitly set a blob's tier when you create it, specify the tier when you upload the blob. After a blob is created, you can change its tier in either of the following ways: By calling the Set Blob Tier operation, either directly or via a lifecycle management policy.
the archive access tier for Azure storage can be set at the account level. This means you can configure the archive access tier for all blobs stored in an Azure storage account, which will affect all containers and blobs within that account.
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