Which three statements are true regarding sharing inheritance? (Choose three.)
A.
A dataset using sharing must also have a security predicate defined.
B.
If a user can see more than 3,000 records on the object in Salesforce, but the user does not have the "View All Data" permission, sharing inheritance is not used. The backup security predicate takes effect. This limitation does not apply to the Opportunity object.
C.
When sharing inheritance is enabled, security predicates are ignored.
D.
Sharing inheritance supports a foreign key for enforcing security.
E.
Sharing inheritance supports Account, Campaign, Case, Contact, Opportunity, Lead, Order, and User. If you use custom objects, you must use security predicates for those.
Although the exercise requests you to choose 3 answers,
I'm completely against the answer A because it uses the "must" which indicates an obligation.
As per the salesforce Help for CRM Analytics:
a) When sharing inheritance is enabled, you can set the security predicate to ‘false’ to block all users not covered by sharing. In fact, this predicate is the default when sharing is enabled on existing datasets. <<< From https://help.salesforce.com/s/articleView?id=sf.bi_security_datasets_predicate_considerations.htm&type=5.
= The above means that you "can" set no security predicate.
b) Optionally, click the pencil under Security Predicate. The security predicate is the row visibility fallback when you exceed sharing inheritance limits, described here. <<< From https://help.salesforce.com/s/articleView?id=sf.bi_security_datasets_sharing_apply_to_recipe.htm&type=5
= It clearly says "Optionally"
Agree... Then I thought C, but that would only be a true statement if they say security predicate is ignored for the first 3000 records if sharing inheritance is on.
And I've never heard anything but a foreign key as mentioned in D.
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