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Salesforce Salesforce-MuleSoft-Platform-Architect Exam Sample Questions 2026

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Salesforce 2026 Release
152 Questions
4.9/5.0

An established communications company is beginning its API-led connectivity journey, The company has been using a successful Enterprise Data Model for many years. The company has identified a self-service account management app as the first effort for API- led, and it has identified the following APIs.
Experience layer: Mobile Account Management EAPI, Browser Account Management EAPI Process layer: Customer Lookup PAPI, Service Lookup PAPI, Account Lookup PAPI System layer: Customer SAPI, Account SAPI, Product SAPI, Service SAPI
According to MuleSoft's API-led connectivity approach, which API would not be served by the Enterprise Data Model?

A. Customer SAPI

B. Customer Lookup PAPI

C. Mobile Account Management EAPI

D. Service SAPI

C.   Mobile Account Management EAPI

Explanation:

✅ Why C is correct

In MuleSoft’s API-led connectivity model, the Enterprise Data Model (EDM) is applied only at the System API layer, because:
- System APIs directly expose systems of record
- They provide canonical, reusable data structures
- They are the foundation of enterprise-wide data consistency

In your scenario:
System APIs (use EDM):
- Customer SAPI
- Account SAPI
- Product SAPI
- Service SAPI

These APIs directly represent enterprise systems and therefore should conform to the Enterprise Data Model.

❌ Why the others are incorrect

B. Customer Lookup PAPI
Process APIs may transform or aggregate data, but they often still work closely with the canonical data model — especially in enterprises with a mature EDM.

A. Customer SAPI
This is a System API, and System APIs are exactly where the Enterprise Data Model is applied.

D. Service SAPI
Also a System API, and therefore should align with the Enterprise Data Model.

✅ Why Experience APIs do NOT use the Enterprise Data Model

Experience APIs (EAPIs) are:
- Tailored to specific channels (mobile, web, partner, etc.)
- Designed for consumer usability, not data normalization
- Optimized for UX needs, not enterprise consistency

Therefore, Experience APIs should NOT expose the Enterprise Data Model.

🧠 Exam takeaway
Enterprise Data Models belong at the System API layer — not at the Experience layer.

What is a key performance indicator (KPI) that measures the success of a typical C4E that is immediately apparent in responses from the Anypoint Platform APIs?

A. The number of production outage incidents reported in the last 24 hours

B. The number of API implementations that have a publicly accessible HTTP endpoint and are being managed by Anypoint Platform

C. The fraction of API implementations deployed manually relative to those deployed using a CI/CD tool

D. The number of API specifications in RAML or OAS format published to Anypoint Exchange

D.   The number of API specifications in RAML or OAS format published to Anypoint Exchange

Explanation:

This question tests the understanding of the primary, measurable outputs of a successful Center for Enablement (C4E) that are directly visible and quantifiable via Anypoint Platform's APIs or interfaces. The C4E's core mission is to foster API-led connectivity by promoting reuse, standardization, and self-service.

Why D is Correct:
The number of API specifications (RAML/OAS) published to Exchange is a direct, platform-measurable KPI for a C4E's success in establishing a design-first culture and creating a discoverable asset catalog. Exchange is the central hub for reuse. An increase in published, well-documented specs indicates that project teams are adopting the design-first practice, contributing to the shared asset library, and enabling discovery for future projects. This data is readily available via the Anypoint Platform APIs (e.g., Exchange API) or the Exchange UI.

Why A is Incorrect:
While reducing outages is a critical ops KPI, it is not the primary, immediate measure of C4E success. A C4E focuses on enablement, governance, and reuse—outage reduction is a beneficial outcome of good practices (like reusable, tested APIs) but is influenced by many other factors (infrastructure, monitoring, code quality). It is also not "immediately apparent" from platform APIs as a C4E metric; it's an ops metric.

Why B is Incorrect:
The number of managed API implementations is a measure of API management adoption, not specifically C4E success. A C4E might help with this, but simply having a managed endpoint doesn't guarantee the API is well-designed, reusable, or following standards. A team could manage many poorly designed APIs. The more fundamental C4E output is the design artifact (the spec) that promotes good design before implementation.

Why C is Incorrect:
The fraction of manual vs. CI/CD deployments measures DevOps maturity and automation adoption. While a C4E often promotes CI/CD best practices, this is an enabler for speed and quality, not the core KPI for the C4E's mission of driving an API-led, reusable architecture. It's a supporting metric, not the key indicator of a reusable asset network.

Core C4E Success Metrics:
The most telling early-stage KPIs for a C4E, visible in Anypoint Platform, are:

Asset Creation & Quality: Number of specs/APIs in Exchange, completeness of specs (e.g., using API Notebooks).
Reuse: Number of projects/applications consuming assets from Exchange (the reuse ratio).
Self-Service Adoption: Number of unique users accessing Exchange, number of access requests auto-approved.

Reference:
MuleSoft's C4E framework documentation emphasizes "Increasing the number of reusable assets in Exchange" as a foundational success metric. The platform's APIs (particularly the Exchange API) can directly report on the count and usage of these assets, making it an ideal, objective KPI.

A code-centric API documentation environment should allow API consumers to investigate and execute API client source code that demonstrates invoking one or more APIs as part of representative scenarios. What is the most effective way to provide this type of code-centric API documentation environment using Anypoint Platform?

A. Enable mocking services for each of the relevant APIs and expose them via their Anypoint Exchange entry

B. Ensure the APIs are well documented through their Anypoint Exchange entries and API Consoles and share these pages with all API consumers

C. Create API Notebooks and include them in the relevant Anypoint Exchange entries

D. Make relevant APIs discoverable via an Anypoint Exchange entry

C.   Create API Notebooks and include them in the relevant Anypoint Exchange entries

Explanation

In Anypoint Exchange you can add API Notebooks that mix prose with executable JavaScript code blocks. Consumers can tweak the code and click Play to invoke real endpoints—ideal for scenario-driven, multi-API walkthroughs.

Eliminate others:
A. Mocking services help try endpoints before implementation, but they don’t provide runnable client code tutorials across scenarios.
B. API Console/Exchange docs are great for spec and try-it, but not for executable code notebooks.
D. Discoverability alone doesn’t deliver code-centric, runnable documentation. (You still need Notebooks.)

References:
Documenting an Asset Using API Notebook (create/run code blocks in Exchange).
Documenting an API (Exchange supports API Notebooks for interactive experimentation).
Exchange portal examples showing runnable API Notebook pages.
MuleSoft Developer Portal overview mentioning runnable code samples in API Notebook.

A company deployed an API to a single worker/replica in the shared cloud in the U.S. West Region.
What happens when the Availability Zone experiences an outage?

A. CloudHub will auto-redeploy the APL in the U.S. East Region

B. The APT will be unavailable until the availability comes back online, at which time the worker/replica will be auto-restarted

C. CloudHub will auto-redeploy the API in another Availability Zone in the U.S. West Region

D. The Anypoint Platform admin is alerted when the AP] is experiencing an outage and needs the trigger the CI/CD pipeline to redeploy to the US. East Region

B.   The APT will be unavailable until the availability comes back online, at which time the worker/replica will be auto-restarted

Explanation:

The scenario specifies:

Single worker/replica
Deployed in the shared CloudHub in U.S. West Region

In CloudHub's shared load balancer model:

Single worker in one AZ: If the application is deployed with only one worker, that worker runs in one availability zone (AZ) (even though AZ assignment is random by CloudHub).

AZ outage impact:
The shared load balancer is multi-AZ, but if the only worker is in the failed AZ, there is no other worker to route traffic to.
The API becomes unavailable because there are no healthy targets for the load balancer.

Recovery behavior:
CloudHub will auto-restart the worker once the AZ is back online (if the underlying infrastructure is restored).
It does not auto-redeploy to another AZ for a single-worker app because that would require redundant workers configured initially.

No cross-region failover:
CloudHub does not automatically redeploy to another region (e.g., U.S. West → East). Cross-region failover requires manual setup or a multi-region deployment strategy.

Why the Other Options Are Incorrect

A. CloudHub will auto-redeploy the API in the U.S. East Region
❌ False. Cross-region failover is not automatic in CloudHub; regions are isolated unless explicitly configured with global load balancing.

C. CloudHub will auto-redeploy the API in another Availability Zone in the U.S. West Region
❌ False for a single-worker app. Auto-redeploy to another AZ would happen only if you have multiple workers initially, since they are distributed across AZs. One worker = tied to one AZ for its lifecycle unless manually redeployed.

D. The Anypoint Platform admin is alerted and must trigger CI/CD to redeploy to U.S. East Region
❌ Partially true about alerting, but automatic restart in same region occurs post-AZ recovery; CI/CD pipeline redeployment to another region is a manual disaster recovery step, not the default behavior.

References

CloudHub High Availability (HA):
HA in CloudHub is achieved by deploying multiple workers, which are distributed across AZs automatically. A single worker offers no HA and is vulnerable to AZ failure.

Shared Load Balancer:
Distributes traffic to healthy workers across AZs, but if all workers are in a failed AZ, traffic fails.

Auto-restart vs. Auto-redeploy:
CloudHub attempts to restart workers in the same AZ after infrastructure recovery. It does not automatically spin up new workers in other AZs for single-worker apps.

Best Practice:
For production resilience, deploy at least 2 workers to ensure multi-AZ distribution and AZ failure tolerance.

Summary
With a single worker in CloudHub, an AZ outage makes the API unavailable until the AZ recovers, at which point CloudHub auto-restarts the worker. Multi-AZ or cross-region failover requires multiple workers or manual intervention.

Which APIs can be used with DataGraph to create a unified schema?



A. APIs 1, 3, 5

B. APIs 2, 4 ,6

C. APIs 1, 2, s5, 6

D. APIs 1, 2, 3, 4

D.   APIs 1, 2, 3, 4

Explanation:

Why
To be used in Anypoint DataGraph for building a unified schema, an API must be reachable from the DataGraph runtime. In the exhibit:

API #1 and API #2 are deployed in CloudHub inside the Customer VPC. They can be reached through the Dedicated Load Balancer (DLB) that fronts the VPC-hosted CloudHub apps. That means DataGraph can invoke them securely through the VPC/DLB path.

API #3 and API #4 are on Customer Hosted Server 1, which is shown as publicly reachable (traffic can come from the public internet, and the diagram shows connectivity into the CloudHub side via the shared LB path). Because they are reachable over the network from DataGraph, they can be included in the unified schema.

API #5 and API #6 are on Customer Hosted Server 2 (Not public). Since they are explicitly marked not public and the diagram shows no private connectivity path (no VPN/Direct Connect/VPC peering/Anypoint networking link) from CloudHub/DataGraph to that server, DataGraph would not be able to reach those APIs. If an API can’t be reached, it can’t be used as a DataGraph source.

Why the other options are wrong

A (1,3,5) includes API #5, which is not publicly reachable and has no private route shown → not usable.
B (2,4,6) includes API #6, also not reachable → not usable.
C (1,2,5,6) includes API #5 and #6, neither reachable → not usable.

✅ Therefore, the APIs that can be used with DataGraph in this architecture are APIs 1, 2, 3, and 4 → Option D.

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