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Salesforce Salesforce-MuleSoft-Platform-Architect Exam Sample Questions 2025

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Salesforce Spring 25 Release
152 Questions
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Select the correct Owner-Layer combinations from below options

A. App Developers owns and focuses on Experience Layer APIs
Central IT owns and focuses on Process Layer APIs
LOB IT owns and focuses on System Layer APIs

B. Central IT owns and focuses on Experience Layer APIs
LOB IT owns and focuses on Process Layer APIs
App Developers owns and focuses on System Layer APIs

C. App Developers owns and focuses on Experience Layer APIs
LOB IT owns and focuses on Process Layer APIs
Central IT owns and focuses on System Layer APIs

C.   App Developers owns and focuses on Experience Layer APIs
LOB IT owns and focuses on Process Layer APIs
Central IT owns and focuses on System Layer APIs

Explanation:

This aligns with the MuleSoft Center for Enablement (C4E) operating model, which defines clear ownership and focus areas for different teams within the API-led connectivity architecture. The model is designed to promote reuse and enablement.

Correct Ownership Mapping:
App Developers own the Experience Layer APIs:
Who: These are the consumers of the API network (e.g., web/mobile app teams, partner integration teams, internal business unit developers).
Why: They understand the specific needs of the end-user or channel. They own the Experience APIs to tailor data and functionality for their specific applications without needing deep knowledge of backend systems.

LOB (Line of Business) IT owns the Process Layer APIs:
Who: IT teams embedded within business units (e.g., Finance IT, Sales Ops IT).
Why: They understand the business processes, rules, and logic unique to their domain. They own Process APIs to orchestrate System APIs and encode business processes (e.g., "customer onboarding," "loan approval") for reuse across multiple Experience APIs.

Central IT owns the System Layer APIs:
Who: The central integration/platform team (often the C4E core team).
Why: They have expertise in managing core systems of record (ERP, CRM, mainframes, databases) and ensuring security, compliance, and stability. They own System APIs to create reusable, canonical abstractions of these backend systems for the entire organization.

This model creates a virtuous cycle: Central IT provides reusable building blocks (System APIs), LOB IT composes them into business processes (Process APIs), and App Developers easily consume them for their applications (Experience APIs).

Why the Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. Incorrectly assigns System Layer APIs to LOB IT. System APIs require deep knowledge of enterprise systems and a mandate for broad reuse, which is typically held by Central IT. LOB IT is better positioned for the business logic in the Process Layer.
B. This option completely inverts the model. Assigning System APIs to App Developers is wrong—they shouldn't deal with backend complexity. Assigning Experience APIs to Central IT defeats the purpose of enabling business-led development. Assigning Process APIs to LOB IT is the only correct part, but the rest is flipped.

Reference:
MuleSoft C4E Operating Model: Clearly defines the "Three-Layer API Ownership" model:
Central IT / Platform Team: Owns the platform and System APIs.
LOB / Domain Teams: Own Process APIs for their business domain.
App / Solution Teams: Own Experience APIs for their specific solutions.

API Product Mindset: This ownership model treats APIs as products managed by the teams closest to their value proposition and consumers.

A company wants to move its Mule API implementations into production as quickly as possible. To protect access to all Mule application data and metadata, the company requires that all Mule applications be deployed to the company's customer-hosted infrastructure within the corporate firewall. What combination of runtime plane and control plane options meets these project lifecycle goals?

A. Manually provisioned customer-hosted runtime plane and customer-hosted control plane

B. MuleSoft-hosted runtime plane and customer-hosted control plane

C. Manually provisioned customer-hosted runtime plane and MuleSoft-hosted control plane

D. iPaaS provisioned customer-hosted runtime plane and MuleSoft-hosted control plane

A.   Manually provisioned customer-hosted runtime plane and customer-hosted control plane

Explanation:

Why A is correct
The key constraints in the question are:

All Mule application data and metadata must remain inside the corporate firewall
Mule applications must be deployed quickly into production

To meet data residency and security requirements, both of the following must be customer-hosted:

Runtime plane → where APIs actually execute
Control plane → where metadata, management, analytics, and configuration are stored

This requirement eliminates any option that uses a MuleSoft-hosted control plane, because that would store metadata outside the corporate firewall.

👉 Therefore, the only valid option is:

A. Manually provisioned customer-hosted runtime plane and customer-hosted control plane
This corresponds to Anypoint Platform Private Cloud Edition (PCE) or equivalent fully customer-managed deployment.

Why the other options are incorrect

B. MuleSoft-hosted runtime + customer-hosted control plane
❌ Not a supported architecture — control plane cannot manage MuleSoft-hosted runtimes in this configuration.

C. Customer-hosted runtime + MuleSoft-hosted control plane
❌ Violates the requirement that all metadata must remain inside the corporate firewall.

D. iPaaS provisioned customer-hosted runtime + MuleSoft-hosted control plane
❌ Still uses a MuleSoft-hosted control plane, which violates the data residency requirement.

Summary
If all data and metadata must remain on-premises, the only valid architecture is:
Customer-hosted runtime + customer-hosted control plane
This ensures full data sovereignty while still enabling production deployment.

A new upstream API Is being designed to offer an SLA of 500 ms median and 800 ms maximum (99th percentile) response time. The corresponding API implementation needs to sequentially invoke 3 downstream APIs of very similar complexity. The first of these downstream APIs offers the following SLA for its response time: median: 100 ms, 80th percentile: 500 ms, 95th percentile: 1000 ms. If possible, how can a timeout be set in the upstream API for the invocation of the first downstream API to meet the new upstream API's desired SLA?

A. Set a timeout of 50 ms; this times out more invocations of that API but gives additional room for retries

B. Set a timeout of 100 ms; that leaves 400 ms for the other two downstream APIs to complete

C. No timeout is possible to meet the upstream API's desired SLA; a different SLA must be negotiated with the first downstream API or invoke an alternative API

D. Do not set a timeout; the Invocation of this API Is mandatory and so we must wait until it responds

B.   Set a timeout of 100 ms; that leaves 400 ms for the other two downstream APIs to complete

Explanation:

The upstream API is designed with a strict SLA:

Median response time: 500 ms
Maximum (99th percentile): 800 ms
It must sequentially invoke three downstream APIs of similar complexity. This means each downstream API should ideally complete within ~250 ms median to stay within the upstream SLA budget.

Now, consider the first downstream API’s SLA:

Median: 100 ms (good fit for the upstream SLA at the median level).
80th percentile: 500 ms (already consumes the entire median SLA budget).
95th percentile: 1000 ms (exceeds the upstream SLA maximum of 800 ms).

This creates a fundamental mismatch:
Even if the upstream API sets a timeout (e.g., 100 ms or 50 ms), it cannot guarantee meeting the SLA at the 95th or 99th percentile.

A timeout of 100 ms would discard valid responses that arrive later but within the downstream API’s SLA.
A timeout of 50 ms would cause even more failures, and retries would not help because the downstream API’s SLA itself allows responses up to 1000 ms.

Therefore, no timeout configuration can reconcile this mismatch. The upstream API’s SLA is stricter than what the downstream API can deliver. The only viable options are:

Negotiate a better SLA with the downstream API provider (reduce latency guarantees).
Invoke an alternative downstream API that meets the required SLA.
Redesign the upstream API’s SLA to align with realistic downstream performance.

Option A
Timeout of 50 ms → Unrealistic. Would cause excessive timeouts and retries, worsening performance.

Option B
Timeout of 100 ms → Still misaligned. The downstream API’s SLA allows responses up to 1000 ms, so this would discard valid responses.

Option D
No timeout → Forces upstream API to wait up to 1000 ms, violating the SLA (max 800 ms).

References
MuleSoft Documentation: API SLA and Policy Design
MuleSoft Certified Platform Architect I Exam Guide — SLA Management and Downstream Dependencies section

👉 In summary:
Option C is correct because the downstream API’s SLA is fundamentally incompatible with the upstream API’s SLA. No timeout can fix this; the SLA must be renegotiated or an alternative API used.

A company deploys Mule applications with default configurations through Runtime Manager to customer-hosted Mule runtimes. Each Mule application is an API implementation that exposes RESTful interfaces to API clients. The Mule runtimes are managed by the MuleSoft-hosted control plane. The payload is never used by any Logger components.
When an API client sends an HTTP request to a customer-hosted Mule application, which metadata or data (payload) is pushed to the MuleSoft-hosted control plane?

A. Only the data

B. No data

C. The data and metadata

D. Only the metadata

D.   Only the metadata

Explanation:

In hybrid deployments (customer-hosted/on-premises Mule runtimes managed by the MuleSoft-hosted control plane via Runtime Manager), the Runtime Manager agent collects and sends only metadata (e.g., application status, resource usage like CPU/memory, inbound/outbound request counts, response times, error rates, JVM metrics) to the control plane for dashboards, alerts, and API analytics.

No application payload data (the actual message content processed by the Mule flows) is sent to the control plane by default. This ensures data privacy and compliance, as sensitive payloads remain on-premises.

The question specifies:
Default configurations.
No Logger components use the payload (so no explicit logging of payload content occurs).

Even if Loggers were present, MuleSoft's architecture does not forward payload content from logs or flows to the control plane—only log messages (if forwarded) and metrics. Payloads are never transmitted unless custom external analytics integrations are configured (not default).

Why not the other options?
A. Only the data: Incorrect—"data" refers to the payload, which is not sent.
B. No data: Incorrect—metadata (metrics, events) is always sent for management and monitoring.
C. The data and metadata: Incorrect—payload ("data") is not sent.

References:
MuleSoft Documentation (Deployment Strategies): "By default, only metadata pushed by the Runtime Manager agent... flows to the cloud. No application data is exposed."

What Mule application deployment scenario requires using Anypoint Platform Private Cloud Edition or Anypoint Platform for Pivotal Cloud Foundry?

A. When it Is required to make ALL applications highly available across multiple data centers

B. When it is required that ALL APIs are private and NOT exposed to the public cloud

C. When regulatory requirements mandate on-premises processing of EVERY data item, including meta-data

D. When ALL backend systems in the application network are deployed in the organization's intranet

C.   When regulatory requirements mandate on-premises processing of EVERY data item, including meta-data

Explanation:

This question tests your understanding of the difference between the Runtime Plane, where data is processed, and the Control Plane, where management metadata such as logs, audit trails, and API metrics reside.

Metadata Residency
In standard CloudHub or Runtime Fabric deployments, the Control Plane is hosted by MuleSoft in the public cloud. Even if your application data stays on-premises, the metadata, including application names, performance metrics, and logs, is sent to the cloud.

Full Isolation
Anypoint Private Cloud Edition and Anypoint Platform for PCF are fully private versions of the platform. They allow an organization to host both the Runtime Plane and the Control Plane within their own data center. This ensures that no data, not even metadata, ever leaves the organization’s physical infrastructure.

Regulatory Compliance
This level of isolation is typically required by government agencies, defense contractors, or highly regulated financial institutions that are legally forbidden from using public cloud services for any part of their infrastructure.

Why Other Options are Incorrect

A: High availability across multiple data centers can be achieved using Runtime Fabric or standard hybrid deployments. It does not strictly require a private version of the Control Plane.

B: You can keep all APIs private in a standard hybrid or CloudHub VPC environment using internal load balancers and VPNs. The management of those APIs, which is the Control Plane, can still reside in the cloud.

D: Connecting to on-premises backend systems is a standard feature of CloudHub using VPN or Transit Gateway, or Runtime Fabric. It does not necessitate moving the entire Anypoint management platform to a private cloud.

Key Takeaway for 2025
For the Platform Architect exam, if the requirement mentions metadata residency or full Control Plane isolation on-premises, the correct answer is Anypoint Private Cloud Edition.

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