HOTSPOT – You have the Azure environment shown in the exhibit. You have virtual network peering between Vnet1 and Vnet2. You have virtual network peering between Vnet4 and Vnet5. The virtual network peering is configured as shown in the following table. For each of the following statements, select Yes if the statement is true. Otherwise, select No. Hot Area:

QuestionsCategory: AZ-700HOTSPOT – You have the Azure environment shown in the exhibit. You have virtual network peering between Vnet1 and Vnet2. You have virtual network peering between Vnet4 and Vnet5. The virtual network peering is configured as shown in the following table. For each of the following statements, select Yes if the statement is true. Otherwise, select No. Hot Area:
Admin Staff asked 7 months ago
HOTSPOT -
You have the Azure environment shown in the exhibit.
 Image
You have virtual network peering between Vnet1 and Vnet2. You have virtual network peering between Vnet4 and Vnet5. The virtual network peering is configured as shown in the following table.
 Image
For each of the following statements, select Yes if the statement is true. Otherwise, select No.
Hot Area:
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Suggested Answer: 
    Correct Answer Image

Box 1: Yes -
Virtual network peering seamlessly connects two Azure virtual networks, merging the two virtual networks into one for connectivity purposes. Gateway transit is a peering property that lets one virtual network use the VPN gateway in the peered virtual network for cross-premises or VNet-to-VNet connectivity.
The following diagram shows how gateway transit works with virtual network peering.
 Reference Image
In the diagram, gateway transit allows the peered virtual networks to use the Azure VPN gateway in Hub-RM. Connectivity available on the VPN gateway, including S2S, P2S, and VNet-to-VNet connections, applies to all three virtual networks.
In hub-and-spoke network architecture, gateway transit allows spoke virtual networks to share the VPN gateway in the hub, instead of deploying VPN gateways in every spoke virtual network.
Box 2: Yes -
VM2 uses the remote gateway GW1 to reach VM4.
Box 3: No -
VM2 can reach VM4 through GW1, but not VM5 as VNEt1 does not use remote Gateways.
Reference: alt="Reference Image" />
In the diagram, gateway transit allows the peered virtual networks to use the Azure VPN gateway in Hub-RM. Connectivity available on the VPN gateway, including S2S, P2S, and VNet-to-VNet connections, applies to all three virtual networks.
In hub-and-spoke network architecture, gateway transit allows spoke virtual networks to share the VPN gateway in the hub, instead of deploying VPN gateways in every spoke virtual network.
Box 2: Yes -
VM2 uses the remote gateway GW1 to reach VM4.
Box 3: No -
VM2 can reach VM4 through GW1, but not VM5 as VNEt1 does not use remote Gateways.
Reference:
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/vpn-gateway/vpn-gateway-peering-gateway-transit
 https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/virtual-network/virtual-network-troubleshoot-peering-issues

This question is in AZ-700 Designing and Implementing Microsoft Azure Networking Solutions Exam
For getting Microsoft Certified: Azure Network Engineer Associate Certificate





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