Question 156 of 300
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GCDL Practice Question: A company's on-premises applications occasionally…

This GCDL practice question tests your understanding of a company's on-premises applications occasionally…. Read the scenario carefully and evaluate each option against the stated constraints before committing to an answer. After answering, compare your reasoning against the explanation and wrong-answer breakdown below. Once you have made your selection, read the full explanation to reinforce the concept and understand why each distractor is designed to mislead on exam day.

A company's on-premises applications occasionally need more compute capacity than their own infrastructure can provide (during seasonal peaks). They want to use cloud resources to handle the overflow traffic while keeping base workloads on-premises. Which cloud architectural pattern describes this?

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A company's on-premises applications occasionally need more compute capacity than their own infrastructure can provide (during seasonal peaks). They want to use cloud resources to handle the overflow traffic while keeping base workloads on-premises. Which cloud architectural pattern describes this?

Answer choices

Why each option matters

Good practice is not just finding the correct option. The wrong answers often show the exact trap the exam wants you to fall into.

A

Best answer

Cloud bursting — using cloud capacity to handle overflow when on-premises resources are exhausted.

Cloud bursting dynamically extends on-premises capacity with cloud resources during peaks. It's an elastic hybrid pattern where cloud supplements (not replaces) on-premises infrastructure.

B

Distractor review

Disaster recovery — using cloud as a failover site when on-premises fails.

Disaster recovery activates cloud resources when on-premises fails (unplanned). Cloud bursting extends capacity during planned peak periods — a capacity management pattern, not a recovery pattern.

C

Distractor review

Multi-cloud — using multiple cloud providers for redundancy.

Multi-cloud uses multiple cloud providers simultaneously. Cloud bursting extends on-premises to one cloud provider during peaks.

D

Distractor review

Cloud migration — moving workloads from on-premises to cloud permanently.

Cloud migration is a permanent move. Cloud bursting is a dynamic, temporary use of cloud capacity for overflow, with base workloads remaining on-premises.

Common exam trap

Common exam trap: NAT rules depend on direction and matching traffic

NAT is not only about the public address. The inside/outside interface roles and the ACL or rule that matches traffic are just as important.

Technical deep dive

How to think about this question

NAT questions usually test address translation, overload/PAT behaviour, static mappings and whether the right traffic is being translated. Read the interface direction and address terms carefully.

KKey Concepts to Remember

  • Static NAT maps one inside address to one outside address.
  • PAT allows many inside hosts to share one public address using ports.
  • Inside local and inside global describe the private and translated addresses.
  • NAT ACLs identify traffic for translation, not always security filtering.

TExam Day Tips

  • Identify inside and outside interfaces first.
  • Check whether the scenario needs static NAT, dynamic NAT or PAT.
  • Do not confuse NAT matching ACLs with normal packet-filtering intent.

Key takeaway

NAT direction and interface roles matter as much as the IP address mapping. Inside/outside designation controls which traffic is translated.

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FAQ

Questions learners often ask

What does this GCDL question test?

Static NAT maps one inside address to one outside address.

What is the correct answer to this question?

The correct answer is: Cloud bursting — using cloud capacity to handle overflow when on-premises resources are exhausted. — Cloud bursting is a hybrid cloud pattern where an application runs primarily on-premises but 'bursts' (overflows) to public cloud resources when demand exceeds on-premises capacity. During normal periods, the on-premises infrastructure handles all load. During peaks, excess workload is automatically routed to cloud resources. When the peak passes, the cloud resources are released. This allows organizations to size their on-premises infrastructure for average load (not peak) while still handling spikes.

What should I do if I get this GCDL question wrong?

Review the four NAT address types (inside local, inside global, outside local, outside global), PAT port overload, and static vs dynamic NAT use cases. Then practise related GCDL NAT questions on configuration and troubleshooting.

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This GCDL practice question is part of Courseiva's free Google Cloud certification practice question bank. Courseiva provides original exam-style practice questions with explanations, topic-based practice, mock exams, readiness tracking, and study analytics to help learners prepare for the GCDL exam.