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

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Salesforce Spring 25 Release1-Jan-2026
152 Questions
4.9/5.0

What CANNOT be effectively enforced using an API policy in Anypoint Platform?

A. Guarding against Denial of Service attacks

B. Maintaining tamper-proof credentials between APIs

C. Logging HTTP requests and responses

D. Backend system overloading

B.   Maintaining tamper-proof credentials between APIs

Explanation:

While Anypoint Platform provides robust security through API policies, it cannot maintain tamper-proof credentials between APIs on its own. This is an architectural and implementation concern rather than a policy enforcement concern.

Why B is the correct answer
Policies can enforce the presence of credentials (like OAuth or Client ID Enforcement), but the actual "tamper-proof" nature of a credential (such as the secrecy of a Client Secret or the cryptographic signing of a JWT) depends on the implementation of the client/provider and the secure storage (like a Vault or KMS). Once a credential is in transit or stored in code, an API Gateway policy cannot prevent a developer or a compromised system from mishandling or "tampering" with the storage of that credential.

Why the Other Options Are Enforceable
A. Guarded against DoS
Can be enforced using Rate Limiting or Spike Control policies to prevent infrastructure exhaustion.

C. Logging
Can be effectively enforced using the Message Logging policy to capture headers, payloads, and metadata.

D. Backend Overload
Can be enforced using Spike Control or Rate Limiting policies to shield the backend system from traffic that exceeds its capacity.

Reference
According to the Anypoint Platform API Manager Documentation, policies are designed to govern the interaction at the gateway level. However, ensuring that a credential is never leaked or tampered with involves Secrets Management and Zero Trust Architecture principles that extend beyond the scope of a standard gateway policy.

A REST API is being designed to implement a Mule application. What standard interface definition language can be used to define REST APIs?

A. Web Service Definition Language(WSDL)

B. OpenAPI Specification (OAS)

C. YAML

D. AsyncAPI Specification

B.   OpenAPI Specification (OAS)

Explanation:

The OpenAPI Specification (OAS) is the industry-standard interface definition language (IDL) for describing RESTful APIs. It allows designers to define endpoints, methods, parameters, request/response schemas, authentication, and examples in a machine-readable and human-readable format (typically JSON or YAML). MuleSoft's Anypoint Platform fully supports OAS (alongside RAML) for API design, import/export, mocking, and proxy generation.

Why the other options are incorrect:
A. Web Service Definition Language (WSDL) → WSDL is the standard for describing SOAP-based web services (not REST). It uses XML and is tied to RPC-style services, not REST principles.

C. YAML → YAML is a data serialization format (like JSON), not an interface definition language. While OAS or RAML documents are often written in YAML, YAML itself does not define API contracts.

D. AsyncAPI Specification → AsyncAPI is the standard for defining asynchronous/event-driven APIs (e.g., WebSockets, Kafka, AMQP). It is not intended for synchronous REST/HTTP APIs.

Reference:
MuleSoft documentation and Anypoint Platform support both RAML (MuleSoft's preferred) and OpenAPI (OAS) as standards for REST API specifications. OAS is explicitly listed as the open, vendor-neutral standard for REST in certification materials and API design best practices.

An API is protected with a Client ID Enforcement policy and uses the default configuration. Access is requested for the client application to the API, and an approved contract now exists between the client application and the API
How can a consumer of this API avoid a 401 error "Unauthorized or invalid client application credentials"?

A. Send the obtained token as a header in every call

B. Send the obtained: client_id and client_secret in the request body

C. Send the obtained clent_id and clent_secret as URI parameters in every call

D. Send the obtained clent_id and client_secret in the header of every API Request call

D.   Send the obtained clent_id and client_secret in the header of every API Request call

Explanation:
When an API is protected with a Client ID Enforcement policy using the default configuration, the standard and simplest authentication method is HTTP Basic Authentication.

Default Configuration Mechanism:
Upon contract approval, the consumer receives a unique client_id and client_secret.
To authenticate, the client must include these credentials in the Authorization header of every HTTP request to the API endpoint.
The format is: Authorization: Basic <base64_encode(client_id:client_secret)>
This is the out-of-the-box, default behavior of the Client ID Enforcement policy when no other authentication method (like OAuth 2.0) is specifically configured.

Why the Other Options Are Incorrect:
A. Send the obtained token as a header in every call: This describes the OAuth 2.0 flow, where the client first exchanges client_id/client_secret for an access token. However, the question specifies the default configuration of Client ID Enforcement, which is not OAuth 2.0 by default. OAuth requires explicit policy configuration.
B. Send the client_id and client_secret in the request body: This is not a standard or supported method by the Client ID Enforcement policy. Credentials should be passed in the header, not the body, for authentication.
C. Send the client_id and client_secret as URI parameters: This is insecure and not the default method. Passing credentials in the URL is a security risk (they can be logged in server logs, browser history, etc.) and is not the prescribed way for this policy.

Reference:
MuleSoft Documentation - "Client ID Enforcement Policy": States that for the default "HTTP Basic Authentication Scheme," the client must "send the client ID and client secret in the HTTP Authorization header using the Basic authentication scheme." It explicitly warns against sending them in the URL.
API Consumer Onboarding Guide: The standard instructions for a developer who has received client_id and client_secret are to configure their HTTP client to use Basic Authentication with those credentials.

What best explains the use of auto-discovery in API implementations?

A. It makes API Manager aware of API implementations and hence enables it to enforce policies

B. It enables Anypoint Studio to discover API definitions configured in Anypoint Platform

C. It enables Anypoint Exchange to discover assets and makes them available for reuse

D. It enables Anypoint Analytics to gain insight into the usage of APIs

A.   It makes API Manager aware of API implementations and hence enables it to enforce policies

Explanation:

In the implementation you add the API’s auto-discovery configuration (with the API ID). When the app starts, the Mule runtime registers with API Manager, so the platform can push/enforce policies (e.g., rate limiting, OAuth, CORS), control access via contracts, and collect usage telemetry. The essence/purpose is to let API Manager manage the live implementation.

Eliminate others:
B. Studio discovering platform APIs — not what auto-discovery does.
C. Exchange asset discovery — Exchange publishing is separate; auto-discovery doesn’t publish or “make reusable” assets.
D. Analytics insight — usage data collection happens as a consequence of being managed in API Manager, but analytics alone is not the purpose; policy/governance is.

An API implementation is being designed that must invoke an Order API, which is known to repeatedly experience downtime. For this reason, a fallback API is to be called when the Order API is unavailable. What approach to designing the invocation of the fallback API provides the best resilience?

A. Search Anypoint Exchange for a suitable existing fallback API, and then implement invocations to this fallback API in addition to the Order API

B. Create a separate entry for the Order API in API Manager, and then invoke this API as a fallback API if the primary Order API is unavailable

C. Redirect client requests through an HTTP 307 Temporary Redirect status code to the fallback API whenever the Order API is unavailable

D. Set an option in the HTTP Requester component that invokes the Order API to instead invoke a fallback API whenever an HTTP 4xx or 5xx response status code is returned from the Order API

A.    Search Anypoint Exchange for a suitable existing fallback API, and then implement invocations to this fallback API in addition to the Order API

Explanation:

✅ Why A is correct:
For maximum resilience, MuleSoft recommends handling fallback logic explicitly in the application flow, rather than relying on implicit platform behavior or redirects.

A resilient design typically includes:
- Primary API invocation
- Explicit error handling / circuit-breaker logic
- Fallback API invocation when the primary API fails

By searching Anypoint Exchange for an existing fallback or alternative API (e.g., a cached, degraded, or read-only service) and invoking it when the primary Order API is unavailable, you:
- Maintain control over fallback behavior
- Avoid tight coupling or hidden runtime behavior
- Align with API-led connectivity and reuse principles

This is the most reliable and architecturally correct approach.

❌ Why the other options are incorrect:

B. Create a second API in API Manager and invoke it as fallback
API Manager is for governance and policy enforcement, not dynamic fallback routing. Creating a second API instance does not inherently provide resilience.

C. Redirect using HTTP 307
Redirecting clients pushes responsibility to the consumer and breaks abstraction. Clients may not support or expect redirects, which violates good API design practices.

D. Use an HTTP Requester option to auto-fallback
The Mule HTTP Requester does not provide a built-in fallback option for handling 4xx/5xx responses. Error handling and fallback logic must be explicitly implemented in the flow using patterns like on-error-continue, choice, or circuit breaker.

✅ Summary:
The most resilient and MuleSoft-aligned approach is to explicitly design fallback behavior in the application logic, typically using an alternative API discovered via Anypoint Exchange.

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