Course Information
Course Overview
6 Full-Length Practice Exams with Detailed Explanations | 390 Unique Questions | Pass the Exam on Your First Attempt
Are you aiming to become an AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner? Our course, "AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner | 6 Practice Exams," is meticulously crafted to help you succeed. With 390 unique, high-quality test questions, spread across six comprehensive practice exams, this course covers all the essential domains of the AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner exam. Each question comes with detailed explanations, ensuring you understand the key concepts and principles required for the certification. Whether you're a beginner or an experienced professional looking to validate your skills, this course will boost your confidence and knowledge, making you exam-ready. Begin your journey to AWS certification success today!
We recommend re-taking these practice tests until you consistently score 80% or higher - that’s when you’re ready to take the exam and achieve an excellent score!
Sample Question:
One of your teammates, who is new to AWS, needs your help protecting an EC2 instance. He has deployed a Web application on that EC2 instance. The teammate wants to ensure that only HTTP and HTTPS traffic are allowed to the EC2 instance. Which of the following options would you recommend to your teammate to ensure that only HTTP and HTTPS traffic are allowed to the EC2 instance?
Network ACLs
AWS Shield
Virtual Private Cloud (VPC)
Security Group
Correct answer
Security Group: Security Groups act as a virtual firewall for your EC2 instances and control inbound and outbound traffic. They are the most suitable option for ensuring that only HTTP and HTTPS traffic are allowed to an EC2 instance as they can be configured to allow specific protocols and ports, such as port 80 for HTTP and port 443 for HTTPS.
Overall explanation
Security Groups are virtual firewalls for your instance to control inbound and outbound traffic. They operate at the instance level and provide stateful filtering of ingress and egress traffic. Here's why Security Groups are the correct choice:
Instance-Level Security:
Security Groups are directly associated with EC2 instances. They allow you to specify which traffic is allowed to reach your instances.
Stateful Nature:
Security Groups are stateful, meaning that if you allow an incoming request from a specific IP and port, the response is automatically allowed regardless of outbound rules.
Granular Control:
You can specify rules based on protocol (e.g., TCP), port number (e.g., 80 for HTTP, 443 for HTTPS), and source/destination IP address or CIDR block.
Ease of Use:
Security Groups are easy to configure and manage. You can quickly set up rules to allow HTTP (port 80) and HTTPS (port 443) traffic.
How to Configure Security Groups for HTTP and HTTPS:
Create a Security Group:
Navigate to the Amazon EC2 console.
Under "Network & Security," select "Security Groups."
Click "Create Security Group."
Add Inbound Rules:
Add a rule for HTTP traffic:
Type: HTTP
Protocol: TCP
Port Range: 80
Source: 0.0.0.0/0 (for all IP addresses) or a specific IP range
Add a rule for HTTPS traffic:
Type: HTTPS
Protocol: TCP
Port Range: 443
Source: 0.0.0.0/0 (for all IP addresses) or a specific IP range
Assign Security Group to EC2 Instance:
Attach the newly created Security Group to your EC2 instance.
Why Other Options are Incorrect:
Network ACLs:
Network ACLs operate at the subnet level, not the instance level, and are stateless, meaning they do not automatically allow response traffic.
AWS Shield:
AWS Shield is a managed Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) protection service. It does not control specific traffic types to EC2 instances.
Virtual Private Cloud (VPC):
A VPC is a virtual network dedicated to your AWS account. While VPCs provide networking infrastructure, they do not control traffic to specific instances. Security Groups within the VPC control traffic.
Resources:
AWS Security Groups
AWS Network ACLs
AWS Shield
Amazon VPC
Course Content
- 1 section(s)
- Section 1 Practice Tests
What You’ll Learn
- Pass your AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner (CLF-C01) exam with ease
- High quality practice exams along with detailed explanations to help build concepts
- The CLF-C01 practice exams include all domains
- All practice questions are added to reflect the difficulty of the real AWS exam
Skills covered in this course
Reviews
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RRayme Shah
I recently took the AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner Exam and successfully passed on my first attempt on May 23rd, 2024. Reflecting on my preparation journey, I realized that relying solely on the lessons provided on the AWS website was not sufficient. It was through the Udemy Cloud Practitioner Mock Exam that I truly expanded my understanding and readiness for the exam.
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AAnshuman Mishra
Omg amazingly designed the test had covered all the topic and services, will be helping me in AWS interviews.. for that i need to do more preparation to crack this.
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GGrella
This is a great course. Nothing but praise for it and how the instructor presents everything. I look forward to taking the test and hopefully passing!
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RRico Robrigado
it was a well-structured set of questions although a lot of typos should be corrected and the key to corrections does not match the correct answer i.e. the intended answer is correct as discussed in the review but is marked wrong. another example is AWS Artifact is entirely different from CodeArtifact. aside from the typos, this is one of the courses I think is challenging and will prepare the student for the exam. additional comment: this course really proves its worth! thank you SK Singh. I realized that it solidifies my knowledge for the Certified Cloud Practitioner Exam. I actually passed the exam. I can honestly say that your course provided me with the knowledge and fills up the gap in my understanding of AWS Architecture pertaining to the exam. again thank you for your awesome course!