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Salesforce Spring 25 Release 152 Questions 4.9/5.0
A system API has a guaranteed SLA of 100 ms per request. The system API is deployed to
a primary environment as well as to a disaster recovery (DR) environment, with different
DNS names in each environment. An upstream process API invokes the system API and
the main goal of this process API is to respond to client requests in the least possible time.
In what order should the system APIs be invoked, and what changes should be made in
order to speed up the response time for requests from the process API?
A. In parallel, invoke the system API deployed to the primary environment and the system API
deployed to the DR environment, and ONLY use the first response
B. In parallel, invoke the system API deployed to the primary environment and the system API
deployed to the DR environment using a scatter-gather configured with a timeout, and then
merge the responses
C. Invoke the system API deployed to the primary environment, and if it fails, invoke the
system API deployed to the DR environment
D. Invoke ONLY the system API deployed to the primary environment, and add timeout and
retry logic to avoid intermittent failures
A. In parallel, invoke the system API deployed to the primary environment and the system API
deployed to the DR environment, and ONLY use the first response
Explanation:
This question presents a different optimization goal than the previous disaster recovery question. Here, the primary goal is the least possible response time for the Process API, and the System API has a guaranteed SLA of 100ms. The presence of a DR environment is a secondary fact to be leveraged for performance, not just resilience.
Why A is Correct:
This implements a "fastest response" or "race" pattern, which is optimal for minimizing latency when you have multiple, functionally equivalent endpoints.
- Parallel Invocation: The Process API sends requests to both the primary and DR System API endpoints simultaneously.
- Use First Response: It immediately returns the result from whichever endpoint responds first, discarding the slower response. This statistically guarantees the lowest possible latency for the client, as it eliminates the risk of the chosen endpoint being temporarily slower. It turns the DR environment into a performance asset, not just a resilience backup.
Why B is Incorrect:
Using a scatter-gather to merge responses adds unnecessary complexity and increases latency. Scatter-gather waits for all parallel routes to complete (or timeout) before proceeding to merge results. This means the response is delayed until the slowest of the two endpoints responds, which is the opposite of the goal to get the fastest possible response. It's used for aggregating different data, not for speed.
Why C is Incorrect:
This is a sequential, primary-first failover strategy. It is excellent for resilience and conserving DR capacity, but it is poor for minimizing response time. If the primary is slow (but not failing), the client still waits for the primary's timeout before even trying the DR, resulting in higher overall latency. It optimizes for reliability, not speed.
Why D is Incorrect:
Invoking only the primary with retries is the baseline approach. It does nothing to leverage the DR environment to improve speed. Timeout and retry logic adds latency on failure but doesn't improve the best-case response time. It fails to use available resources to meet the stated goal.
Trade-off Consideration:
Pattern A (Race): Optimizes for minimum latency but doubles the load on the backend systems (both primary and DR get every request). This is acceptable only if both environments are scaled to handle 100% of the traffic, which may have cost implications.
Pattern C (Failover): Optimizes for resource efficiency and resilience but accepts higher latency in failure scenarios.
Given the explicit goal of "respond in the least possible time," the race pattern (A) is the architecturally correct choice.
Implementation in Mule 4:
This can be implemented using a Scatter-Gather where each route calls a different endpoint, but with a critical difference: you would not aggregate. Instead, you would use Error Handling and Choice logic to capture the first successful response and cancel the other route, or use a custom aggregation strategy that picks the first successful result. More elegantly, it can be done with the async scope and competing callbacks.
Reference:
This pattern is known as "Parallel Request" or "Competing Consumers" in integration design. It's a standard technique for reducing latency when idempotent calls can be made to multiple identical endpoints. MuleSoft's documentation on performance optimization discusses parallel processing for reducing overall flow execution time.
How can the application of a rate limiting API policy be accurately reflected in the RAML definition of an API?
A. By refining the resource definitions by adding a description of the rate limiting policy behavior
B. By refining the request definitions by adding a remaining Requests query parameter with description, type, and example
C. By refining the response definitions by adding the out-of-the-box Anypoint Platform rate- limit-enforcement securityScheme with description, type, and example
D. By refining the response definitions by adding the x-ratelimit-* response headers with description, type, and example
D. By refining the response definitions by adding the x-ratelimit-* response headers with description, type, and example
Explanation:
✅ Why D is correct
In Anypoint Platform, when a rate limiting policy is applied, the gateway automatically adds rate-limit response headers, such as:
X-RateLimit-Limit
X-RateLimit-Remaining
X-RateLimit-Reset
These headers are the standard, observable contract that API consumers use to understand:
How many requests they’re allowed
How many remain
When the limit resets
To accurately reflect this behavior in the API specification (RAML), you should document these headers in the response definitions.
This is the correct and recommended way to reflect rate limiting behavior in RAML without embedding implementation logic or policies directly into the API design.
❌ Why the other options are incorrect
A. Adding descriptive text to resources
Descriptions are informational only and do not formally describe API behavior or contract details such as headers.
B. Adding a “remainingRequests” query parameter
Rate limiting is not client-controlled input, so it should not be modeled as a request parameter.
C. Adding a securityScheme for rate limiting
Rate limiting is not a security mechanism (unlike OAuth, JWT, etc.). There is no built-in “rate-limit security scheme” in RAML.
🧠 Exam takeaway
Rate limiting is reflected in RAML through response headers, not request parameters or security schemes.
An organization wants to make sure only known partners can invoke the organization's
APIs. To achieve this security goal, the organization wants to enforce a Client ID
Enforcement policy in API Manager so that only registered partner applications can invoke
the organization's APIs. In what type of API implementation does MuleSoft recommend
adding an API proxy to enforce the Client ID Enforcement policy, rather than embedding
the policy directly in the application's JVM?
A. A Mule 3 application using APIkit
B. A Mule 3 or Mule 4 application modified with custom Java code
C. A Mule 4 application with an API specification
D. A Non-Mule application
D. A Non-Mule application
Explanation:
Why D is correct
MuleSoft recommends using an API proxy (deployed on a Mule runtime with gateway capabilities) when the backend API implementation is not running in Mule (i.e., it’s a non-Mule application). In that situation, you can’t “embed” Mule policies inside the backend app’s JVM, so the recommended pattern is to place a Mule-generated proxy in front of it and apply policies (like Client ID Enforcement) on the proxy.
MuleSoft’s “When to Use API Proxies” guidance explicitly includes: use a proxy if your API is live but not hosted in a Mule runtime.
Why the other options are not the best answer A. Mule 3 application using APIkit — Mule apps can use API Autodiscovery and have policies applied without requiring a separate proxy (proxy is optional, not the recommended necessity).
B. Mule 3 or Mule 4 app with custom Java code — Still Mule-hosted; policies are intended to be applied via API Manager/gateway without rewriting the app’s JVM logic. The “proxy vs embedded” decision is mainly about whether the backend is Mule or non-Mule.
C. Mule 4 application with an API specification — Same: Mule-hosted + Autodiscovery is the standard approach; a proxy isn’t the recommended default.
Bottom line: If the implementation is non-Mule, the practical/recommended way to enforce Client ID Enforcement is via an API proxy in front of it.
An organization wants MuleSoft-hosted runtime plane features (such as HTTP load
balancing, zero downtime, and horizontal and vertical scaling) in its Azure environment.
What runtime plane minimizes the organization's effort to achieve these features?
A. Anypoint Runtime Fabric
B. Anypoint Platform for Pivotal Cloud Foundry
C. CloudHub
D. A hybrid combination of customer-hosted and MuleSoft-hosted Mule runtimes
A. Anypoint Runtime Fabric
Explanation:
The organization wants MuleSoft-hosted runtime plane features (HTTP load balancing, zero-downtime deployments, horizontal and vertical scaling) but running in their Azure environment.
CloudHub (option C, including CloudHub 2.0) is MuleSoft's fully managed iPaaS, providing all these features out-of-the-box with minimal effort. However, it runs on MuleSoft-hosted infrastructure (backed by AWS), not in the customer's Azure environment.
Anypoint Runtime Fabric (RTF) is a container-based runtime plane (using Docker/Kubernetes) that delivers the same MuleSoft-hosted-like features: built-in HTTP load balancing, zero-downtime redeployments, horizontal/vertical scaling, and high availability. It is installed and runs in the customer's own infrastructure, including Microsoft Azure (e.g., on Azure Kubernetes Service - AKS or VMs). This meets the requirement of running in Azure while providing the desired features with significantly less operational effort compared to manual setups.
RTF minimizes the organization's effort because it automates orchestration, scaling, and management via MuleSoft's tools, without requiring them to build these capabilities from scratch.
Why the other options are incorrect:
B. Anypoint Platform for Pivotal Cloud Foundry
This is an older integration for deploying Mule apps on Pivotal Cloud Foundry (PCF), a PaaS platform. PCF can run on Azure, but it is not a standard or current MuleSoft runtime plane option for achieving these features natively. It requires managing PCF itself and is largely deprecated in favor of RTF or CloudHub.
C. CloudHub
Provides the features with zero effort but is MuleSoft-hosted (on AWS), not in the customer's Azure environment.
D. A hybrid combination of customer-hosted and MuleSoft-hosted Mule runtimes
Hybrid typically refers to combining CloudHub (MuleSoft-hosted) with customer-hosted standalone runtimes. Standalone customer-hosted runtimes require manual configuration for load balancing, scaling, and zero-downtime, increasing effort significantly.
Reference:
MuleSoft official documentation on deployment strategies and Runtime Fabric confirms RTF supports Azure deployment with built-in features like load balancing and scaling, while preserving centralized management from the Anypoint control plane.
The implementation of a Process API must change.
What is a valid approach that minimizes the impact of this change on API clients?
A. Update the RAML definition of the current Process API and notify API client developers
by sending them links to the updated RAML definition
B. Postpone changes until API consumers acknowledge they are ready to migrate to a new
Process API or API version
C. Implement required changes to the Process API implementation so that whenever
possible, the Process API's RAML definition remains unchanged
D. Implement the Process API changes in a new API implementation, and have the old API
implementation return an HTTP status code 301 - Moved Permanently to inform API clients
they should be calling the new API implementation
C. Implement required changes to the Process API implementation so that whenever
possible, the Process API's RAML definition remains unchanged
Explanation:
Why C is correct (minimizes client impact):
The goal is to keep the API contract stable for existing consumers. If you can implement the required internal changes while preserving the existing RAML/interface (same resources, methods, request/response shapes, and semantics), then clients don’t need to change anything—this is the lowest-impact approach and aligns with contract-first / API-led practices where the spec is the “promise” to consumers. MuleSoft also explicitly treats non–backward-compatible contract changes as a reason to change the API version—so if you can avoid changing the contract, you avoid forcing a version migration.
Why the other options are not as good:
A. Update RAML and notify clients
Updating the RAML is fine only if the change is backward compatible. But this option implies the contract changes and pushes the burden onto consumers (“here’s the new RAML”), which can still break existing clients. Minimizing impact means avoiding breaking contract changes in the first place when possible.
B. Postpone until consumers acknowledge readiness
This is not a robust strategy: it delays delivery and still results in consumer disruption later. Good API lifecycle management uses backward compatibility and versioning/parallel support rather than waiting for acknowledgements.
D. New implementation + HTTP 301
A 301 redirect is primarily a browser/caching-oriented mechanism and is not a reliable migration strategy for API clients. Many non-browser clients won’t follow redirects automatically (or may drop headers/auth), and it still forces consumers to adapt. The usual approach for breaking changes is to publish a new version/endpoint and support both versions in parallel for a deprecation window, not “301 everyone.”
Reference takeaway:
Only change/version the API spec when changes are not backward compatible; otherwise keep the contract stable and evolve the implementation behind it.
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