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Exam 5V0-22.23 All Questions

View all questions & answers for the 5V0-22.23 exam

Exam 5V0-22.23 topic 1 question 30 discussion

Actual exam question from VMware's 5V0-22.23
Question #: 30
Topic #: 1
[All 5V0-22.23 Questions]

A six-node vSAN ESA cluster contains multiple virtual machines, and a vSAN storage policy with the rule "Failures to tolerate" set to "1 failure - RAID-5 (Erasure Coding)" is assigned. A vSAN administrator has changed the rule in the assigned policy to "2 failures - RAID-6 (Erasure Coding)".
What is the result of this change?

  • A. No changes occur until the policy is reapplied.
  • B. The changes are queued for 60 minutes.
  • C. The policy change is rejected immediately.
  • D. The updated policy is serially applied to the virtual machines.
Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: D 🗳️

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goatbernard
Highly Voted 1 year, 1 month ago
Selected Answer: D
The updated policy is serially applied to the virtual machines is the correct answer because changing the rule in the assigned policy will trigger a policy compliance check and a resynchronization of the affected objects. The policy change will not be rejected, queued, or ignored, as it is a valid and supported operation. However, the policy change will not be applied in parallel, as that would cause too much network and disk traffic. Instead, the policy change will be applied one virtual machine at a time, starting with the most critical ones, until all virtual machines are compliant with the new policy.
upvoted 5 times
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walker0418
Most Recent 4 days, 1 hour ago
After you edit a storage policy that is already associated with a virtual machine object, you must reapply the policy. By reapplying the policy, you communicate new storage requirements to the datastore where the virtual machine object resides. A. would be the best answer. https://docs.vmware.com/en/VMware-vSphere/7.0/com.vmware.vsphere.storage.doc/GUID-476613DD-787A-4E97-8FA5-00639D206FD2.html
upvoted 1 times
walker0418
1 day, 4 hours ago
Adding to my previous entry, when you modify a storage policy in use, once you click finish, a pop up window will appear and ask you if you want to Reapply to objects -- Manually later or if you click the drop down arrow, you can select 'Now' then click ok after you've made your selection. The default choice is 'Manually later', therefore, A would be the best answer.
upvoted 1 times
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gumaam
1 month, 1 week ago
Selected Answer: A
https://docs.vmware.com/en/VMware-vSphere/7.0/com.vmware.vsphere.storage.doc/GUID-476613DD-787A-4E97-8FA5-00639D206FD2.html When a storage policy is modified, the changes do not take effect immediately. The policy must be reapplied to the virtual machines for the new settings to take effect. Until then, the virtual machines continue operating under the previous policy configuration.
upvoted 1 times
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Ansari678
1 year, 1 month ago
Selected Answer: A
A. No changes occur until the policy is reapplied. The policy change is not immediately applied to the virtual machines or objects. Instead, it is queued, and the policy will only be applied when it is reapplied to the virtual machines or objects. This allows you to control when and how the new policy is enforced, giving you flexibility and the opportunity to plan for any potential resource or capacity impacts.
upvoted 2 times
FR_Wolfman
11 months, 2 weeks ago
No, if you modified an existing policy, it applied as stated in answer D. The case you detail is if you attach a new storage policy to a VM or an object.
upvoted 1 times
walker0418
4 days, 1 hour ago
No, that is not correct. After you edit a storage policy that is already associated with a virtual machine object, you must reapply the policy. By reapplying the policy, you communicate new storage requirements to the datastore where the virtual machine object resides.
upvoted 1 times
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pludbe
1 year, 1 month ago
D - Correcy
upvoted 3 times
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