Practice Test

True or False: Azure Site Recovery is a service within Microsoft Azure used for disaster recovery.

  • True
  • False

Answer: True

Explanation: Azure Site Recovery provides disaster recovery by orchestrating replication, failover and recovery of virtual machines.

Which of the following is not a prerequisite to use Azure Site Recovery for failover?

  • a. Sufficient available storage
  • b. Associated network permissions
  • c. Active subscription to Office 365
  • d. Virtual network in the secondary region

Answer: c. Active subscription to Office 365

Explanation: To perform failover using Azure Site Recovery, you don’t need an active subscription to Office However, you need sufficient storage, network permissions, and a virtual network in the secondary region.

True or False: Azure Site Recovery supports replication of Azure virtual machines from one Azure region to another.

  • True
  • False

Answer: True

Explanation: Azure Site Recovery supports cross-region disaster recovery by replicating Azure VMs from one Azure region to another.

During Azure Site Recovery, when can you apply network settings from the recovery plan?

  • a. Before failover
  • b. During failover
  • c. After failover
  • d. Both before and after failover

Answer: b. During failover

Explanation: Network settings are typically defined as part of the recovery plan and applied during failover.

True or False: You need to manually prepare VMs for failover in Azure Site Recovery.

  • True
  • False

Answer: False

Explanation: Azure Site Recovery prepares the VMs automatically as part of the failover and failback process.

What is the term used in Azure Site Recovery for the process of reverse-replicating after a successful failover?

  • a. Fallback
  • b. Failback
  • c. Fallforward
  • d. Failforward

Answer: b. Failback

Explanation: The term “failback” is used for the process of reverse-replication after a successful failover.

In Azure Site Recovery, what do recovery points enable you to do?

  • a. Store data
  • b. Store VMs
  • c. Back up files
  • d. Restore to a point in time

Answer: d. Restore to a point in time

Explanation: Recovery points are used to restore your system to a specific point in time during the failover process.

True or False: Azure Site Recovery can only replicate data, not applications.

  • True
  • False

Answer: False

Explanation: Azure Site Recovery can replicate both data and applications for comprehensive failover coverage.

Which of the following is not a supported replication scenario in Azure Site Recovery?

  • a. Azure to Azure
  • b. on-premises to Azure
  • c. Azure to on-premises
  • d. on-premises to on-premises

Answer: c. Azure to on-premises

Explanation: Azure Site Recovery supports Azure to Azure replication, on-premises to Azure replication, and on-premises to on-premises replication. But it does not support Azure to on-premises replication scenario.

True or False: Performing failover on Azure Site Recovery requires downtime for your application.

  • True
  • False

Answer: True

Explanation: While the service minimizes downtime, there is still a brief period required for the failover process to complete, during which the application may be unavailable.

Interview Questions

What is Azure Site Recovery?

Azure Site Recovery is a Microsoft Azure service that provides data replication, disaster recovery, and failover capabilities. This service allows businesses to keep their applications running during planned and unplanned outages.

What is the purpose of performing the failover to a secondary region while using Azure Site Recovery?

Performing failover to a secondary region while using Azure Site Recovery helps in providing continuous business operations during a region-wide outage. It facilitates disaster recovery by managing and orchestrating replication, failover, and failback of Azure resources.

What are the key steps for performing a failover in Azure Site Recovery?

The primary steps include: Initiating a failover operation in the Azure Site Recovery, ensuring that the failover operation completes successfully, verifying the correct operation of the application in the secondary region, and finally re-protecting the application for future failovers.

What happens to the primary region during the failover process with Azure Site Recovery?

During the failover process, the primary region is down due to a disaster or is deliberately shut down during a planned failover.

Is performing a planned failover to a secondary region in Azure Site Recovery disruptive to the workloads running in the primary region?

No, a planned failover is not disruptive. An up-to-date copy of workloads from the primary region is running in the secondary region before the planned failover is initiated.

How does Azure Site Recovery provide redundancy and resilience?

Azure Site Recovery provides redundancy and resilience by creating and maintaining secondary copies of your virtual machines and services in a separate region, allowing you to switch over to them if the primary region goes down.

Can Azure Site Recovery help in migrating applications to Azure?

Yes, Azure Site Recovery is not just for disaster recovery. It can also be used as a migration tool to move workloads from an on-premises location to Azure.

How do you initiate a failback operation after a failover has occurred in Azure Site Recovery?

To initiate a failback operation after a failover, you would start a failback from the Recovery Service vault in the secondary region. Azure Site Recovery handles the rest, replicating changes back to the primary region and, eventually, failing back to the primary region.

Which recovery plan should be used in Azure Site Recovery to orchestrate a failover to a secondary region?

The recovery plan must be associated with the target replication policy. This recovery plan defines the order in which machines are failed over, and allows you to insert manual actions or scripts into the failover process.

Does Azure Site Recovery support automated failover?

Yes, Azure Site Recovery supports both manual and automated failover actions. The automated failover ensures that your workloads are available in the secondary region when the primary region is experiencing an outage.

Can you perform testing without affecting production workloads or ongoing replication in Azure Site Recovery?

Yes, Azure Site Recovery provides a test failover option which allows you to test your disaster recovery plan without impacting the production environment.

What is the role of the ‘Re-Protect’ option in Azure Site Recovery?

After a successful failover, the ‘Re-Protect’ option is used to reverse the direction of replication from the secondary region back to the primary region, ensuring that the application stays protected in case of another failover event.

Do you need to perform any DNS changes after the failover in Azure Site Recovery?

Yes, you would need to update your DNS to redirect network traffic from the primary to the secondary region, post-failover.

How do you verify a successful failover in Azure Site Recovery?

A successful failover in Azure Site Recovery can be verified using the Azure portal. All the steps of the failover, including the recovery point time, complete successfully and the status of the entity changes to ‘Protected’ post-failover.

How long does Azure Site Recovery retain the recovery points?

Azure Site Recovery retains recovery points for the last 24 hours for Azure VMs and 72 hours for on-premises VMs to Azure.

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