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Exam 5V0-31.22 topic 1 question 58 discussion

Actual exam question from VMware's 5V0-31.22
Question #: 58
Topic #: 1
[All 5V0-31.22 Questions]

The architect of a multi-site VMware Cloud Foundation solution is tasked with ensuring that the prerequisites for vSAN data at rest encryption have been achieved. The existing design calls for use of the vSphere Native Key Provider. NSX-T is configured with Federation, and both sites benefit from a stretched T0 and T1 network topology.
A new security policy requires the use of vSphere Virtual Machine encryption, in addition to the at-rest encryption already configured. During a failover test from Site-A to Site-B using Site Recovery Manager, the virtual machines were unable to power-on.
How does the design need to be changed to support the new requirement?

  • A. Ensure that a TPM 2.0 certified module is installed on all ESXi hosts at Site-B.
  • B. Use a third-party KMS solution at each site.
  • C. Use a third-party KMS solution that allows for key replication.
  • D. Ensure that the Site Recovery Manager service account has Cryptographer.ReadKeyServersInfo privileges.
Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: C 🗳️

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diegof1
3 weeks, 1 day ago
For me C is the most secure option On the other hand, I couda find in vSphere Native Key Provider (NKP) Questions & Answers this: I use Site Recovery Manager. What considerations are there to ensure encrypted virtual machines can run on the DR site? When using Site Recovery Manager, you must configure both vCenter instances with the same vSphere Native Key Provider key encryption key (KEK). This requires you to export the vSphere Native Key Provider from one vCenter instance and import it into the DR vCenter instance. For more see Site Recovery Manager and Virtual Machine Encryption. https://core.vmware.com/native-key-provider-questions-answers#is-native-key-provider-a-kms Although D sounds fine, I could not find any reference guide about the need for Cryptographer.ReadKeyServersInfo privileges.
upvoted 1 times
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Sawanm
4 months, 2 weeks ago
its D https://docs.vmware.com/en/VMware-vSphere/7.0/com.vmware.vsphere.security.doc/GUID-54B9FBA2-FDB1-400B-A6AE-81BF3AC9DF97.html
upvoted 2 times
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C (25%)
B (20%)
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