What is the difference between a situation and a policy when using the Take Action option?
A. Take Action in a situation uses the system administrator ID, and within a policy the User ID that created the policy will be used when executing the Take Action.
B. Take Action in a situation can be issued at the Managed System Tivoli Enterprise Monitoring Server, while in a policy the Take Action can be issued at the Hub Tivoli Enterprise Monitoring Server.
C. Take Action in a situation will only issue the command at the Managed System (agent) where the situation became true, while Take Action in a policy can be executed at any managed system.
D. Take Action in a situation can write to the Universal Message Log, while Take Action in a policy can only issue a command.
正解:B
質問 2:
A group of situations that will be used at a remote location are being set up. How are the alerts set up to be forwarded to an event management system at that remote location?
A. Run a scriptthatforwards the event to the remote event management system.
B. Override the default option where the event is forwarded to the remote event management system.
C. Send the event to IBM Tivoli Netcool/OMNIbus automatically.
D. This is not possible with the current version of IBM Tivoli Monitoring.
正解:B
質問 3:
A Batch Application process starts at a specific time and finishes when process xyz completes. A group of situations need to be active during this batch processing window.
How is this accomplished?
A. Use a time event situation and have it trigger a policy and in the policy, select the Start/Stop a Situation to define all the situations need to be active. Then select the Until feature and define the event for process xyz completion. Then select Start/Stop a Situation to define all the situations to stop.
B. Define two situations. One is a time event situation and the other detects when process xyz is active. Use a policy that triggers when the time event situation becomes true, and use the Start/Stop a Situation to define all the situations that need to be active. Use the Evaluate a Situation Now to check if process xyz is active, and if that situation is false then use the Start/Stop a Situation to stop all of the situations that were activated in this policy.
C. Use a time event situation and in that situation select the Distribution tab and assign the specific situations that need to be active. Then use the Until tab to define the ending condition being the process xyz.
D. Define three situations. The first is a time event situation, the second detects when process xyz is active and writes a Universal Message, and the third that checks for the Universal Message written by the other situation. Use a policy that triggers when the time event situation becomes true, and use the Start/Stop a situation to define all the situations that need to be active. Use a second policy that triggers when the Universal Message Situation becomes true, and then use Evaluate a Situation Now to evaluate if processxyz is still active. If it is not active then use Start/Stop a Situation to stop all the situations that were made active.
正解:D
質問 4:
What are two ways to control all of the data streams that are available to a user in IBM Tivoli Monitoring? (Choose two.)
A. Policies
B. Pruning data
C. Workspaces
D. Logicalviews
E. Workflows
正解:C,D
質問 5:
When a permitted user creates a new query, where is this definition saved?
A. on the local machine of the user but export is possible towards a central location
B. on the Tivoli Enterprise Portal Server
C. on the same location as the product defined queries if selected before starting the query creation
D. on the Tivoli Enterprise Monitoring Server
正解:B
質問 6:
With a policy there are many features and functions available to create a workflow type process when a given situation becomes true. Which feature is available?
A. Start/Stop a Policy
B. Start/Stop an IBM Tivoli Application Dependency Discovery Manager
C. Start/StopSNMP
D. Start/Stop an IBM Tivoli Monitoring Agent
正解:A