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

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Salesforce Spring 25 Release10-Nov-2025
152 Questions
4.9/5.0

A circuit breaker strategy is planned in order to meet the goal of improved response time and demand on a downstream API.

*Circuit Open: More than 10 errors per minute for three minutes
*Circuit Half-Open: One error per minute
*Circuit Closed: Less than one error per minute for five minutes

Out of several proposals from the engineering team, which option will meet this goal?

A. Create a custom policy that implements the circuit breaker and includes policy template expressions for the required settings

B. Create Anypoint Monitoring alerts for Circuit Open/Closed configurations, and then implement a retry strategy for Circuit Half-Open configuration

C. Add the Circuit Breaker policy to the API instance, and configure the required settings

D. Implement the strategy in a Mule application, and provide the settings in the YAML configuration

C.   Add the Circuit Breaker policy to the API instance, and configure the required settings

Explanation:

To meet the goal of improving response time and managing load on a downstream API, the Circuit Breaker policy offered in Anypoint API Manager is the most effective and recommended solution.
MuleSoft provides an out-of-the-box Circuit Breaker policy that can be applied to API instances. This policy supports advanced configurations, including thresholds for opening, closing, and half-opening the circuit based on error rates and time intervals. These align well with the scenario:
✑ Circuit Open when errors exceed 10 per minute for 3 minutes.
✑ Circuit Half-Open to test the endpoint with limited requests (e.g., 1 per minute).
✑ Circuit Closed when stability is detected (less than 1 error/min for 5 minutes).

Option C enables this strategy with minimal custom development and centralized governance through API Manager.

✑ Option A (custom policy) is overly complex for this use case.
✑ Option B (monitoring alerts and retry strategy) lacks automatic circuit breaking.
✑ Option D (YAML config in Mule app) is non-standard and may lead to inconsistencies across deployments.
Using the native Circuit Breaker policy ensures better maintainability, observability, and alignment with platform best practices.

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

Correct Answer: A Non-Mule application

*****************************************

>> All type of Mule applications (Mule 3/ Mule 4/ with APIkit/ with Custom Java Code etc) running on Mule Runtimes support the Embedded Policy Enforcement on them.

>> The only option that cannot have or does not support embedded policy enforcement and must have API Proxy is for Non-Mule Applications.

So, Non-Mule application is the right answer.

What API policy would LEAST likely be applied to a Process API?

A. Custom circuit breaker

B. Client ID enforcement

C. Rate limiting

D. JSON threat protection

D.   JSON threat protection

Explanation

Correct Answer: JSON threat protection

*****************************************

Fact: Technically, there are no restrictions on what policy can be applied in what layer. Any policy can be applied on any layer API. However, context should also be considered properly before blindly applying the policies on APIs.

That is why, this question asked for a policy that would LEAST likely be applied to a Process API.

From the given options:

>> All policies except "JSON threat protection" can be applied without hesitation to the APIs in Process tier.

>> JSON threat protection policy ideally fits for experience APIs to prevent suspicious JSON payload coming from external API clients. This covers more of a security aspect by trying to avoid possibly malicious and harmful JSON payloads from external clients calling experience APIs.

As external API clients are NEVER allowed to call Process APIs directly and also these kind of malicious and harmful JSON payloads are always stopped at experience API layer only using this policy, it is LEAST LIKELY that this same policy is again applied on Process Layer API.

Reference: https://docs.mulesoft.com/api-manager/2.x/policy-mule3-provided-policies

How are an API implementation, API client, and API consumer combined to invoke and process an API?

A. The API consumer creates an API implementation, which receives API invocations from an API such that they are processed for an API client

B. The API client creates an API consumer, which receives API invocations from an API such that they are processed for an API implementation

C. The ApI consumer creates an API client, which sends API invocations to an API such that they are processed by an API implementation

D. The ApI client creates an API consumer, which sends API invocations to an API such that they are processed by an API implementation

C.   The ApI consumer creates an API client, which sends API invocations to an API such that they are processed by an API implementation

Explanation:

Let’s break down the key roles:
API Consumer
The entity (e.g., a business unit or external system) that needs to use the API
API Client
The actual software (e.g., app, script, integration) that sends requests to the API
API
The interface that defines how clients interact with the backend logic
API Implementation
The backend logic or service that processes the API requests and returns responses

🔄 Flow of Invocation:
API Consumer decides to use an API.
They create or configure an API client (e.g., a Mule flow, Postman collection, or frontend app).
The API client sends requests to the API endpoint.
The API implementation receives and processes the request, returning a response.

This is a classic separation of concerns in API-led architecture:
Consumers don’t directly interact with implementations.
Clients are the bridge between consumers and APIs.

❌ Why the Other Options Are Incorrect:
A Reverses the relationship — consumers don’t create implementations.
B Misrepresents the flow — clients don’t create consumers.
D Incorrect actor relationships — clients don’t create consumers, and the flow is reversed.

🔗 Reference:
MuleSoft API-led Connectivity Overview
MuleSoft Docs – API Manager and Client Interaction

What is true about where an API policy is defined in Anypoint Platform and how it is then applied to API instances?

A. The API policy Is defined In Runtime Manager as part of the API deployment to a Mule runtime, and then ONLY applied to the specific API Instance

B. The API policy Is defined In API Manager for a specific API Instance, and then ONLY applied to the specific API instance

C. The API policy Is defined in API Manager and then automatically applied to ALL API instances

D. The API policy is defined in API Manager, and then applied to ALL API instances in the specified environment

B.   The API policy Is defined In API Manager for a specific API Instance, and then ONLY applied to the specific API instance

Explanation

Correct Answer: The API policy is defined in API Manager for a specific API instance, and then ONLY applied to the specific API instance.

***************************************** >> Once our API specifications are ready and published to Exchange, we need to visit API Manager and register an API instance for each API.

>> API Manager is the place where management of API aspects takes place like addressing NFRs by enforcing policies on them.

>> We can create multiple instances for a same API and manage them differently for different purposes.

>> One instance can have a set of API policies applied and another instance of same API can have different set of policies applied for some other purpose. >> These APIs and their instances are defined PER environment basis. So, one need to manage them seperately in each environment.

>> We can ensure that same configuration of API instances (SLAs, Policies etc..) gets promoted when promoting to higher environments using platform feature. But this is optional only. Still one can change them per environment basis if they have to.

>> Runtime Manager is the place to manage API Implementations and their Mule Runtimes but NOT APIs itself. Though API policies gets executed in Mule Runtimes, We CANNOT enforce API policies in Runtime Manager. We would need to do that via API Manager only for a cherry picked instance in an environment.

So, based on these facts, right statement in the given choices is - "The API policy is defined in API Manager for a specific API instance, and then ONLY applied to the specific API instance".

Reference: https://docs.mulesoft.com/api-manager/2.x/latest-overview-concept

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