An administrator working in a vSphere with Tanzu environment wants to ensure that all persistent volumes configured by developers within a namespace are placed on a defined subset of datastores The administrator has applied tags to the required datastores in the vSphere Client Which action should the administrator take next to meet the requirement?
Create a storage policy containing the tagged datastores. and apply it to the vSphere Namespace.
Create a storage class containing the tagged datastores. and apply it to the Supervisor Cluster
Create a persistent volume claim containing the tagged datastores, and apply it to the vSphere Namespace.
Create a storage Policy containing the tagged datastores. and apply it to the Supervisor Cluster.
Correct answer: A
Explanation:
The vSphere administrator defines and assigns VM storage policies to a namespace:VM storage policies are translated into Kubernetes storage classes.Developers can access all assigned VM storage policies in the form of storage classes.Developers cannot manage storage classes.Storage class names are created in the following way:Spaces in VM Storage Policy names are replaced with hyphens (-).Special characters are replaced with a digit. A VM Storage Policy called My Gold Policy $ is called my-gold-policy-0 as a storage class.
The vSphere administrator defines and assigns VM storage policies to a namespace:
VM storage policies are translated into Kubernetes storage classes.
Developers can access all assigned VM storage policies in the form of storage classes.
Developers cannot manage storage classes.
Storage class names are created in the following way:
Spaces in VM Storage Policy names are replaced with hyphens (-).
Special characters are replaced with a digit. A VM Storage Policy called My Gold Policy $ is called my-gold-policy-0 as a storage class.
Question 2
Which three roles does the Spherelet perform? (Choose three )
Determines placement of vSphere pods
Manages node configuration
Starts vSphere pods
Provides a key-value store for pod configuration
Communicates with Kubernetes API
Provisions Tanzu Kubernetes clusters
Correct answer: BCE
Explanation:
Spherelet is a kubelet that is ported natively to ESXi. It allows the ESXi host to become part of a Kubernetes cluster. Spherelet performs the following functions:Communicates with the control plane VMsManages node configurationStarts vSphere PodsMonitors vSphere Pods
Spherelet is a kubelet that is ported natively to ESXi. It allows the ESXi host to become part of a Kubernetes cluster. Spherelet performs the following functions:
Communicates with the control plane VMs
Manages node configuration
Starts vSphere Pods
Monitors vSphere Pods
Question 3
Why would developers choose to deploy an application as a vSphere Pod instead of a Tanzu Kubernetes cluster?
They need the application to run as privileged pods.
The application works with sensitive customer data, and they want strong resource and security isolation.
They want to have root level access to the control plane and worker nodes in the Kubernetes cluster.
The application requires a version of Kubernetes that is above the version running on the supervisor cluster.
Correct answer: B
Explanation:
A vSphere Pod is a VM with a small footprint that runs one or more Linux containers. With vSphere Pods, workloads have the following capabilities:Strong isolation from a Linux kernel based on Photon OSResource management using DRSSame level of resource isolation as VMsOpen Container Initiative (OCI) compatibleEquivalent to a Kubernetes Container Host vSphere Pods are not compatible with vSphere vMotion. When an ESXi host is placed into maintenance mode, running vSphere Pods are drained and redeployed on another ESXi host, butonly if the vSphere Pod is part of a ReplicaSet.
A vSphere Pod is a VM with a small footprint that runs one or more Linux containers. With vSphere Pods, workloads have the following capabilities:
Strong isolation from a Linux kernel based on Photon OS
Resource management using DRS
Same level of resource isolation as VMs
Open Container Initiative (OCI) compatible
Equivalent to a Kubernetes Container Host vSphere Pods are not compatible with vSphere vMotion. When an ESXi host is placed into maintenance mode, running vSphere Pods are drained and redeployed on another ESXi host, but