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Salesforce Spring 25 Release 152 Questions 4.9/5.0
To minimize operation costs, a customer wants to use a CloudHub 1.0 solution. The customer's requirements are:
* Separate resources with two Business groups
* High-availability (HA) for all APIs
* Route traffic via Dedicated load balancer (DLBs)
* Separate environments into production and non-production
Which solution meets the customer's needs?
A. One production and one non-production Virtual Private Cloud (VPC).
Use availability zones to differentiate between Business groups.
Allocate maximum CIDR per VPCs to ensure HA across availability zones
B. One production and one non-production Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) per Business group.
Minimize CIDR aligning with projected application total.
Choose a MuleSoft CloudHub 1.0 region with multiple availability zones.
Deploy multiple workers for HA,
C. One production and one non-production Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) per Business group.
Minimize CIDR aligning with projected application total.
Divide availability zones during deployment of APIs for HA.
D. One production and one non-production Virtual Private Claud (VPC).
Configure subnet to differentiate between business groups.
Allocate maximum CIDR per VPCs to make it easier to add Child groups.
Span VPC to cover three availability zones.
B. One production and one non-production Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) per Business group.
Minimize CIDR aligning with projected application total.
Choose a MuleSoft CloudHub 1.0 region with multiple availability zones.
Deploy multiple workers for HA,
Explanation:
In CloudHub 1.0, Business Groups are organizational units in Anypoint Platform that provide resource separation (environments, permissions, etc.). To separate resources for two Business Groups while meeting all requirements:
Separate VPCs per Business Group (one prod + one non-prod each): Each Business Group can own its own VPCs, ensuring network isolation and dedicated resources. Sharing VPCs across Business Groups is not supported—VPCs are tied to a single Business Group.
Dedicated Load Balancers (DLBs): DLBs are configured per VPC, so separate VPCs allow each Business Group to have its own DLB for traffic routing.
High Availability (HA): Achieved by deploying multiple workers (replicas) per application. CloudHub automatically distributes them across available AZs in the selected region (no manual AZ division needed).
Minimize costs: Use the smallest CIDR block that fits projected needs (e.g., /27 or /26 instead of maximum). Choose a region with ≥3 AZs (most do) for better distribution.
Production/non-production separation: Handled by separate VPCs (and environments) per type.
Why the other options are incorrect
A. One prod/non-prod VPC total + using AZs for Business Groups
Violates separation; VPCs cannot be shared across Business Groups, and AZs do not separate Business Groups.
C. Separate VPCs per group but "Divide availability zones during deployment"
Incorrect; users cannot manually assign or divide AZs in CloudHub deployments—platform handles distribution.
D. One prod/non-prod VPC total + subnets for Business Groups
Same sharing issue as A; subnets do not separate Business Groups, and "Child groups" is not a relevant concept here.
Reference
MuleSoft CloudHub 1.0 documentation confirms VPCs are owned by a single Business Group, DLBs are per VPC, HA uses multi-worker distribution across AZs, and cost optimization favors minimal viable CIDR sizing. This setup is standard for multi-business-group isolation in CloudHub 1.0.
A large company wants to implement IT infrastructure in its own data center, based on the corporate IT policy requirements that data and metadata reside locally.
Which combination of Mule control plane and Mule runtime plane(s) meets the requirements?
A. Anypoint Platform Private Cloud Edition for the control plane and the MuleSoft-hosted runtime plane
B. The MuleSoft-hosted control plane and Anypoint Runtime Fabric for the runtime plane
C. The MuleSoft-hosted control plane and customer-hosted Mule runtimes for the runtime plane
D. Anypoint Platform Private Cloud Edition for the control plane and customer-hosted Mule runtimes for the runtime plane
D. Anypoint Platform Private Cloud Edition for the control plane and customer-hosted Mule runtimes for the runtime plane
Explanation
Why D is correct
The requirement says “data and metadata reside locally” (in the company’s own data center). That means:
The control plane (where Anypoint stores/manages platform metadata such as API definitions, configs, policies, analytics/management metadata, etc.) must be customer-hosted → Anypoint Platform Private Cloud Edition (PCE) provides the control plane on-prem, keeping platform data storage and processing local.
The runtime plane (where request/response data and payloads are processed) must also be customer-hosted → customer-hosted Mule runtimes in the data center satisfy local data processing.
So PCE control plane plus customer-hosted runtimes is the only choice that keeps both metadata (control plane) and data (runtime plane) local.
Why the other options don’t meet the requirement
A
PCE control plane is local, but MuleSoft-hosted runtime plane means runtime execution is in MuleSoft cloud → data won’t reside locally.
B
MuleSoft-hosted control plane means metadata is stored in MuleSoft cloud, violating “metadata reside locally,” even if Runtime Fabric is on-prem for data.
C
MuleSoft-hosted control plane again violates “metadata reside locally,” even though runtimes are customer-hosted.
Exam takeaway
If a question explicitly requires both data and metadata to be local, that implies a customer-hosted control plane (Anypoint Platform Private Cloud Edition) and a customer-hosted runtime plane.
A Mule application exposes an HTTPS endpoint and is deployed to three CloudHub workers that do not use static IP addresses. The Mule application expects a high volume of client requests in short time periods. What is the most cost-effective infrastructure component that should be used to serve the high volume of client requests?
A. A customer-hosted load balancer
B. The CloudHub shared load balancer
C. An API proxy
D. Runtime Manager autoscaling
B. The CloudHub shared load balancer
Explanation
Cost-effectiveness: The CloudHub shared load balancer is included with your CloudHub subscription at no additional cost for basic functionality. Other options, like a Dedicated Load Balancer or customer-hosted solution, would incur significant extra costs. Built-in load balancing: When you deploy an application to more than one CloudHub worker, the shared load balancer automatically distributes incoming traffic using a round-robin algorithm. Since the application is already deployed to three workers, this built-in capability is the most direct and economical way to handle high request volumes. HTTPS support: The shared load balancer supports HTTPS endpoints. It includes a shared SSL certificate, so no custom certificate is required. No static IP dependency: The shared load balancer uses DNS to route traffic to the workers and does not require static IP addresses, which aligns with the application's deployment configuration.
Why the other options are incorrect A. A customer-hosted load balancer: This would be significantly more expensive due to infrastructure, setup, and maintenance costs. The lack of static IPs for the CloudHub workers also makes a custom-hosted load balancer challenging to configure. C. An API proxy: While an API proxy can provide caching, security, and traffic management, it is primarily a component managed within API Manager for governance, not a high-volume load-balancing solution by itself. It also typically requires a load balancer in front of it. D. Runtime Manager autoscaling: Autoscaling is for dynamically scaling the number of workers up or down based on load. While it's a good tool for managing variable loads, it is not a direct load-balancing component and has additional licensing requirements. Since the application is already on three workers, the immediate need is for an efficient, cost-effective way to distribute the high volume of requests, which is the function of the shared load balancer.
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.
An API has been updated in Anypoint Exchange by its API producer from version 3.1.1 to
3.2.0 following accepted semantic versioning practices and the changes have been
communicated via the API's public portal.
The API endpoint does NOT change in the new version.
How should the developer of an API client respond to this change?
A. The update should be identified as a project risk and full regression testing of the
functionality that uses this API should be run
B. The API producer should be contacted to understand the change to existing functionality
C. The API producer should be requested to run the old version in parallel with the new one
D. The API client code ONLY needs to be changed if it needs to take advantage of new
features
D. The API client code ONLY needs to be changed if it needs to take advantage of new
features
Explanation:
This question tests the practical application of Semantic Versioning (SemVer) principles from the perspective of an API consumer. The key facts are: the version changed from 3.1.1 to 3.2.0, and the endpoint did NOT change.
Why D is Correct:
According to SemVer, a change in the MINOR version (3.2.0) indicates the addition of new, backward-compatible functionality. This means:
No Breaking Changes: Existing API clients built against version 3.1.1 will continue to work without modification on the 3.2.0 endpoint. Their contracts (request/response structures for the calls they use) remain valid.
Endpoint Stability: The question explicitly states the endpoint does not change, so no URL updates are needed.
Optional Upgrade: The client developer only needs to update their code if they wish to consume the new features introduced in 3.2.0. This is the core promise of backward compatibility in a MINOR version increment.
Why A is Incorrect:
While some regression testing is prudent, labeling this as a "project risk" and mandating "full regression testing" is an overreaction to a MINOR version update that, by definition, should not break existing functionality. This represents a lack of trust in the API producer's adherence to SemVer and the communicated changes. Standard practice is targeted testing, not treating it as a major risk.
Why B is Incorrect:
Contacting the producer to understand changes is unnecessary if the API producer has already communicated the changes via the public portal (as stated). A well-maintained portal/changelog should provide all the information a consumer needs. The whole point of SemVer and proper communication is to make such manual coordination obsolete for MINOR changes.
Why C is Incorrect:
Requesting the producer to run the old version in parallel is a demand suited for a MAJOR version change (e.g., 3.x to 4.0), which introduces breaking changes and requires a migration period. For a backward-compatible MINOR update, running parallel versions is wasteful and unnecessary. The old client should work seamlessly with the new version.
Consumer's Responsibility:
Upon seeing a MINOR version update, the consumer should:
- Review the changelog/portal to understand new features.
- Decide if they want to adopt any new features.
- If not, no action is required; continue using the same endpoint and client code.
Reference:
Semantic Versioning 2.0.0 states: "Minor version Y (x.Y.z | x > 0) MUST be incremented if new, backward compatible functionality is introduced to the public API."
MuleSoft's API consumer guidance emphasizes that for non-breaking changes, consumers can upgrade at their own pace to adopt new features, with no urgent changes required.
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