| Exam Name: | Google Cloud Certified - Associate Cloud Engineer | ||
| Exam Code: | Associate-Cloud-Engineer Dumps | ||
| Vendor: | Certification: | Google Cloud Certified | |
| Questions: | 343 Q&A's | Shared By: | macey |
You created a Kubernetes deployment by running kubectl run nginx image=nginx replicas=1. After a few days, you decided you no longer want this deployment. You identified the pod and deleted it by running kubectl delete pod. You noticed the pod got recreated.
$ kubectlgetpods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
nginx-84748895c4-nqqmt 1/1 Running 0 9m41s
$ kubectldeletepod nginx-84748895c4-nqqmt
pod nginx-84748895c4-nqqmt deleted
$ kubectlgetpods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
nginx-84748895c4-k6bzl 1/1 Running 0 25s
What should you do to delete the deployment and avoid pod getting recreated?
Your company is seeking a scalable solution to retain and explore application logs hosted on Compute Engine. You must be able to analyze your logs with SQL queries, and you want to be able to create charts to identify patterns and trends in your logs over time. You want to follow Google-recommended practices and minimize your operational costs. What should you do?
Your company wants to migrate your data from an on-premises relational database to Google Cloud. Your current database can no longer scale with respect to the growth of your users and you expect the number of users to rapidly grow. You need to choose a relational database that allows you to globally scale while minimizing your management and administration efforts. You also want to follow Google-recommended practices. What should you do?