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Snowflake ADA-C01 Exam Syllabus Topics:
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Snowflake SnowPro Advanced Administrator Sample Questions (Q48-Q53):
NEW QUESTION # 48
When adding secure views to a share in Snowflake, which function is needed to authorize users from another account to access rows in a base table?
Answer: B
Explanation:
Explanation
According to the Working with Secure Views documentation, secure views are designed to limit access to sensitive data that should not be exposed to all users of the underlying table(s). When sharing secure views with another account, the view definition must include a function that returns the identity of the user who is querying the view, such as CURRENT_USER, CURRENT_ROLE, or CURRENT_ACCOUNT. These functions can be used to filter the rows in the base table based on the user's identity. For example, a secure view can use the CURRENT_USER function to compare the user name with a column in the base table that contains the authorized user names. Only the rows that match the user name will be returned by the view. The CURRENT_CLIENT function is not suitable for this purpose, because it returns the IP address of the client that is connected to Snowflake, which is not related to the user's identity.
NEW QUESTION # 49
A Snowflake Administrator created a role ROLE_MANAGED_ACCESS and a schema SCHEMA_MANAGED_ACCESS as follows:
USE ROLE SECURITYADMIN;
CREATE ROLE ROLE_MANAGED_ACCESS;
GRANT ROLE ROLE_MANAGED_ACCESS TO ROLE SYSADMIN;
GRANT USAGE ON WAREHOUSE COMPUTE_WH TO ROLE ROLE_MANAGED_ACCESS;
GRANT ALL privileges ON DATABASE WORK TO ROLE ROLE_MANAGED_ACCESS;
USE ROLE ROLE_MANAGED_ACCESS;
CREATE SCHEMA SCHEMA_MANAGED_ACCESS WITH MANAGED ACCESS;
USE ROLE SECURITYADMIN;
GRANT SELECT, INSERT ON FUTURE TABLES IN SCHEMA SCHEMA MANAGED ACCESS to ROLE_MANAGED_ACCESS; The Administrator now wants to disable the managed access on the schema.
How can this be accomplished?
Answer: D
Explanation:
Explanation
According to the Snowflake documentation1, you can change a managed access schema to a regular schema using the ALTER SCHEMA statement with the DISABLE MANAGED ACCESS keywords. This will disable the managed access feature on the schema and revert the access control to the default behavior. Option B is incorrect because dropping and recreating the schema will also delete all the objects and metadata in the schema, which is not necessary to disable the managed access. Option C is incorrect because revoking the privileges on the future tables from the role is not required to disable the managed access. Option D is incorrect because there is no WITHOUT MANAGED ACCESS option in the CREATE SCHEMA statement.
NEW QUESTION # 50
A Snowflake Administrator has a multi-cluster virtual warehouse and is using the Snowflake Business Critical edition. The minimum number of clusters is set to 2 and the maximum number of clusters is set to 10. This configuration works well for the standard workload, rarely exceeding 5 running clusters. However, once a month the Administrator notes that there are a few complex long-running queries that are causing increased queue time and the warehouse reaches its maximum limit at 10 clusters.
Which solutions will address the issues happening once a month? (Select TWO).
Answer: B,C
Explanation:
According to the Snowflake documentation1, a multi-cluster warehouse is a virtual warehouse that consists of multiple clusters of compute resources that can scale up or down automatically to handle the concurrency and performance needs of the queries submitted to the warehouse. A multi-cluster warehouse has a minimum and maximum number of clusters that can be specified by the administrator. Option A is a possible solution to address the issues happening once a month, as it allows the administrator to use a task to increase the cluster size for the time period that the more complex queries are running and another task to reduce the size of the cluster once the complex queries complete. This way, the warehouse can have more resources available to handle the complex queries without reaching the maximum limit of 10 clusters, and then return to the normal cluster size to save costs. Option B is another possible solution to address the issues happening once a month, as it allows the administrator to have the group running the complex monthly queries use a separate appropriately-sized warehouse to support their workload. This way, the warehouse can isolate the complex queries from the standard workload and avoid queue time and resource contention. Option C is not a recommended solution to address the issues happening once a month, as it would increase the costs and complexity of managing the multi-cluster warehouse, and may not solve the underlying problem of inefficient queries. Option D is a good practice to improve the performance of the queries, but it is not a direct solution to address the issues happening once a month, as it requires analyzing and optimizing the complex queries using clustering keys or materialized views, which may not be feasible or effective in all cases. Option E is not a recommended solution to address the issues happening once a month, as it would increase the costs and waste resources by starting more clusters than needed for the standard workload.
NEW QUESTION # 51
A user with the proper role issues the following commands when setting up and activating network policies:
CREATE OR REPLACE NETWORK POLICY foo_policy
ALLOWED_IP_LIST = ( '1.1.1.0/24', '2.2.2.0/24' , '3.3. 3. 0/24' )
BLOCKED IP LIST = ( '1.1.1.1')
COMMENT = 'Account level policy';
ALTER ACCOUNT SET NETWORK_POLICY=FOO_POLICY;
CREATE OR REPLACE NETWORK POLICY bar_policy
ALLOWED_IP_LIST = ('3.3.3.0/24')
BLOCKED IP LIST = ('3.3.3.10')
COMMENT = 'user level policy';
ALTER USER userl SET NETWORK_POLICY=BAR_POLICY;
Afterwards, user1 attempts to log in to Snowflake from IP address 3.3.3.10.
Will the login be successful?
Answer: A
Explanation:
According to the Snowflake documentation1, network policies are a feature that allows restricting access to your account based on user IP address. A network policy can be applied to an account, a user, or a security integration, and can specify a list of allowed IP addresses and a list of blocked IP addresses. If there are network policies applied to more than one of these, the most specific network policy overrides more general network policies. In this case, the user1 has a network policy (bar_policy) applied to them, which overrides the account-level network policy (foo_policy). The bar_policy allows access only from the IP range 3.3.3.0/24, and blocks access from the IP address 3.3.3.10. Therefore, the user1 will not be able to log in to Snowflake from IP address 3.3.3.10, as it is found in the BLOCKED_IP_LIST of bar_policy. Option A is incorrect because the ALLOWED_IP_LIST of bar_policy does not override the BLOCKED_IP_LIST of bar_policy. Option C is incorrect because the ALLOWED_IP_LIST of foo_policy does not apply to user1, as it is overridden by the user-level network policy. Option D is incorrect because the ALLOWED_IP_LIST of foo_policy does not matter, as it is overridden by the user-level network policy.
NEW QUESTION # 52
What are the requirements when creating a new account within an organization in Snowflake? (Select TWO).
Answer: D,E
Explanation:
Explanation
According to the CREATE ACCOUNT documentation, the account name must be specified when the account is created, and it must be unique within an organization, regardless of which Snowflake Region the account is in. The other options are incorrect because:
*The account does not require at least one ORGADMIN role within one of the organization's accounts. The account can be created by an organization administrator (i.e. a user with the ORGADMIN role) through the web interface or using SQL, but the new account does not inherit the ORGADMIN role from the existing account. The new account will have its own set of users, roles, databases, and warehouses.
*The account name is not immutable and can be changed. The account name can be modified by contacting Snowflake Support and requesting a name change. However, changing the account name may affect some features that depend on the account name, such as SSO or SCIM.
*The account name does not need to be unique among all Snowflake customers. The account name only needs to be unique within the organization, as the account URL also includes the region and cloud platform information. For example, two accounts with the same name can exist in different regions or cloud platforms, such as myaccount.us-east-1.snowflakecomputing.com and myaccount.eu-west-1.aws.snowflakecomputing.com.
NEW QUESTION # 53
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