-- Exhibit —
-- Exhibit —
A vSphere administrator receives a report of an issue with a vApp. After connecting to the environment with the vSphere Client, the administrator does not see the vApp, but instead sees the inventory shown in the exhibit.
What explains this behavior?
A. The administrator is connected to the ESXi host running the vApp.
B. The administrator is using the Web Client.
C. The vApp is in a partially deleted state.
D. The vApp has been converted to a resource pool.
Correct Answer: A
Explanation/Reference:
Explanation:
A: Before you can build your inventory you must get your ESXi hosts into vCenter Server. And before you can get your ESXi hosts into vCenter Server, you need to have a datacenter object. Then you will get Inventory views. The exhibit shows the administrator logged into the ESXi host.
Incorrect Answers:
B: The vSphere Client allows you to search your vSphere inventory for virtual machines, hosts, datastores, networks, or folders that match specified criteria. This exhibit shows that the administrator is connected to the host that runs the vApp.
C: Whether the vApp is partially deleted or not, this exhibit shows that the administrator is connected to the host on which the vApp resides.
D: The vApp cannot be converted to a resource pool, rather it can be placed in a resource pool which would still be in the same inventory view. A vApp is a resource pool object.
References:
https://pubs.vmware.com/vsphere-50/topic/com.vmware.ICbase/PDF/vsphere-esxi-vcenter-server-50-troubleshooting-guide.pdf
Lowe, S. & Marshall, N., Mastering VMWare vSphere 5.5, Wiley and Sons, Indianapolis, 2014, pp. 100, 449, 466