Azure Question and Answer Part -13
Question. 1


Box 1: Yes –
User1 is a Cloud Device Administrator.
Device2 is Azure AD joined.Group1 has the assigned to join type. User1 is the owner of Group1.
Note: Assigned groups – Manually add users or devices into a static group.
Azure AD joined or hybrid Azure AD joined devices utilize an organizational account in Azure AD
Box 2: No –
User2 is a User Administrator.
Device1 is Azure AD registered.
Group1 has the assigned join type, and the owner is User1.
Note: Azure AD registered devices utilize an account managed by the end user, this account is either a Microsoft
account or another locally managed credential.
Box 3: Yes –
User2 is a User Administrator.
Device2 is Azure AD joined.
Group2 has the Dynamic Device join type, and the owner is User2.
Reference:
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/active-directory/devices/overview
Question. 2

• A. Delete VM1
• B. Stop VM1
• C. Stop the backup of SQLDB01 Most Voted
• D. Delete sa001
• C. Stop the backup of SQLDB01 Most Voted
Question. 3
DRAG DROP –
You have an Azure subscription that is used by four departments in your company. The subscription contains 10
resource groups. Each department uses resources in several resource groups.
You need to send a report to the finance department. The report must detail the costs for each department.
Which three actions should you perform in sequence? To answer, move the appropriate actions from the list of
actions to the answer area and arrange them in the correct order.
Select and Place:

Box 1: Assign a tag to each resource.
You apply tags to your Azure resources giving metadata to logically organize them into a taxonomy. After you apply
tags, you can retrieve all the resources in your subscription with that tag name and value. Each resource or resource
group can have a maximum of 15 tag name/value pairs. Tags applied to the resource group are not inherited by the
resources in that resource group.
Box 2: From the Cost analysis blade, filter the view by tag
After you get your services running, regularly check how much they’re costing you. You can see the current spend
and burn rate in Azure portal.
1. Visit the Subscriptions blade in Azure portal and select a subscription.
You should see the cost breakdown and burn rate in the popup blade.
2. Click Cost analysis in the list to the left to see the cost breakdown by resource. Wait 24 hours after you add a
service for the data to populate.
3. You can filter by different properties like tags, resource group, and timespan. Click Apply to confirm the filters and
Download if you want to export the view to a
Comma-Separated Values (.csv) file.
Box 3: Download the usage report
Question. 4

• A. The App Service plan for WebApp1 remains in West Europe. Policy2 applies to WebApp1.
• B. The App Service plan for WebApp1 moves to North Europe. Policy2 applies to WebApp1.
• C. The App Service plan for WebApp1 remains in West Europe. Policy1 applies to WebApp1.
• D. The App Service plan for WebApp1 moves to North Europe. Policy1 applies to WebApp1.
• A. The App Service plan for WebApp1 remains in West Europe. Policy2 applies to WebApp1.
Question. 5
HOTSPOT –
You have an Azure subscription named Subscription1 that has a subscription ID of c276fc76-9cd4-44c9-99a7-
4fd71546436e.
You need to create a custom RBAC role named CR1 that meets the following requirements:
✑ Can be assigned only to the resource groups in Subscription1
✑ Prevents the management of the access permissions for the resource groups
✑ Allows the viewing, creating, modifying, and deleting of resources within the resource groups
What should you specify in the assignable scopes and the permission elements of the definition of CR1? To answer,
select the appropriate options in the answer area.
NOTE: Each correct selection is worth one point.
