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Topic starter
10/09/2022 11:59 am
You have an Azure subscription that contains the resources shown in the following table.
VM1 and VM2 run a website that is configured as shown in the following table.
LB1 is configured to balance requests to VM1 and VM2.
You configure a health probe as shown in the exhibit. (Click the Exhibit tab.)
You need to ensure that the health probe functions correctly.
What should you do?
- A . On LB1, change the Unhealthy threshold to 65536.
- B . On LB1, change the port to 8080.
- C . On VM1 and VM2, create a file named Probe1.htm in the C:\intepub\wwwroot\Temp folder.
- D . On VM1 and VM2, create a file named Probe1.htm in the C:\intepub\wwwroot\SiteA\Temp folder.
Suggested Answer: D
Explanation:
Load balancing provides a higher level of availability and scale by spreading incoming requests across virtual machines (VMs). You can use the Azure portal to create a Standard load balancer and balance internal traffic among VMs.
To load balance successfully between VM1 and VM2 you have to place the html file in the path mentioned in the Probe1 configuration.
References: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/load-balancer/tutorial-load-balancer-standard-internal-portal
Explanation:
Load balancing provides a higher level of availability and scale by spreading incoming requests across virtual machines (VMs). You can use the Azure portal to create a Standard load balancer and balance internal traffic among VMs.
To load balance successfully between VM1 and VM2 you have to place the html file in the path mentioned in the Probe1 configuration.
References: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/load-balancer/tutorial-load-balancer-standard-internal-portal