READ Free Dumps For Microsoft- 70-533
Question ID 13657 | You administer an Azure Web Site named contoso. The development team has
implemented changes to the website that need to be validated.
You need to validate and deploy the changes with minimum downtime to users.
What should you do first?
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Option A | Create a new Linked Resource.
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Option B | Configure Remote Debugging on contoso.
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Option C | Create a new website named contosoStaging.
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Option D | Create a deployment slot named contosoStaging.
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Option E | Back up the contoso website to a deployment slot.
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Correct Answer | D |
Explanation Explanation: The deployment slots feature for Azure Websites allows validating a version of your site with full content and configuration updates on the target platform before directing customer traffic to this version. The expectation is that a deployment slot would be fully configured in the desired target format before performing a swap. References:
Question ID 13658 | Your company network includes users in multiple directories.
You plan to publish a software-as-a-service application named SaasApp1 to Azure Active
Directory.
You need to ensure that all users can access SaasApp1.
What should you do?
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Option A | Configure the Federation Metadata URL
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Option B | Register the application as a web application.
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Option C | Configure the application as a multi-tenant.
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Option D | Register the application as a native client application.
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Correct Answer | C |
Explanation Explanation: * When you get deeper into using Windows Azure Active Directory, youll run into new terminology. For instance, is called "directory" is also referred to as a Windows Azure AD Tenant or simply as "tenant." This stems from the fact that WAAD ()Windows Azure Active Directory is a shared service for many clients. In this service, every client gets its own separate space for which the client is the tenant. In the case of WAAD this space is a directory. This might be a little confusing, because you can create multiple directories, in WAAD terminology multiple tenants, even though you are a single client. * Multitenant Applications in Azure A multitenant application is a shared resource that allows separate users, or "tenants," to view the application as though it was their own. A typical scenario that lends itself to a multitenant application is one in which all users of the application may wish to customize the user experience but otherwise have the same basic business requirements. Examples of large multitenant applications are Office 365, Outlook.com, and visualstudio.com.