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Which of the following statements are true about Amazon Route 53 resource records?

Which of the following statements are true about Amazon Route 53 resource records? Choose 2 answers

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A.
An Alias record can map one DNS name to another Amazon Route 53 DNS name.

B.
A CNAME record can be created for your zone apex.

C.
An Amazon Route 53 CNAME record can point to any DNS record hosted anywhere.

D.
TTL can be set for an Alias record in Amazon Route 53.

E.
An Amazon Route 53 Alias record can point to any DNS record hosted anywhere.

Explanation:

http://docs.aws.amazon.com/Route53/latest/DeveloperGuide/resource-record-sets-choosing-alias-nonalias.html

14 Comments on “Which of the following statements are true about Amazon Route 53 resource records?

    1. upkar says:

      E is wrong please refer below line

      “An alias resource record set can only point to a CloudFront distribution, an Elastic Beanstalk environment, an ELB load balancer, an Amazon S3 bucket that is configured as a static website, or another resource record set in the same Amazon Route 53 hosted zone in which you’re creating the alias resource record set. However, you can’t create an alias that points to the resource record set that Amazon Route 53 creates when you create a policy record”

      Ref – http://docs.aws.amazon.com/Route53/latest/DeveloperGuide/resource-record-sets-choosing-alias-non-alias.html




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  1. majidy says:

    Answer is A&C

    https://aws.amazon.com/route53/faqs/

    Amazon Route 53 offers ‘Alias’ records (an Amazon Route 53-specific virtual record). Alias records are used to map resource record sets in your hosted zone to Amazon Elastic Load Balancing load balancers, Amazon CloudFront distributions, AWS Elastic Beanstalk environments, or Amazon S3 buckets that are configured as websites.

    Alias records work like a CNAME record in that you can map one DNS name (example.com) to another ‘target’ DNS name (elb1234.elb.amazonaws.com).

    http://docs.aws.amazon.com/Route53/latest/DeveloperGuide/resource-record-sets-choosing-alias-non-alias.html

    A CNAME record can point to any DNS record hosted anywhere, including to the resource record set that Amazon Route 53 automatically creates when you create a policy record.




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  2. Satya says:

    Hi I want to say big Thank you for all the members in the forum and also for this web site. Today I have passed AWS Solution architect associate exam. The answers and the discussions in this forum have helped me a lot. I scored 89%.

    A few points would like to highlight:

    1. some members were asking whether the questions are not valid or not? Yes all questions are valid

    2. One advise to all. The answers provided when you click “Show answer” are not correct.Please keep this point.

    Satya




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  3. McEphin says:

    I get it, the answer is A and C.

    Rhetorically speaking, someone tell me how Rt53 can point to any record anywhere? I mean, that’s not really true. What if DNS server isn’t accessible to the internet. What about a PTR record? CNAME to PTR record would be Name to IP which is not what a CNAME record is for. Physicists think there are parallel universes, can Rt53 point to the DNS servers parallel universes? These questions… Anywhere is a terrible choice in words




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