GCP - Cloud Monitoring and LoggingA microservices app uses Cloud Trace and Cloud Monitoring. How does this combination help improve reliability?ATrace stores logs; Monitoring deletes old dataBTrace identifies slow requests; Monitoring tracks system health metricsCTrace encrypts data; Monitoring scales instances automaticallyDTrace backs up data; Monitoring sends emailsCheck Answer
Step-by-Step SolutionSolution:Step 1: Understand Cloud Trace roleCloud Trace shows request latency and paths to find bottlenecks.Step 2: Understand Cloud Monitoring roleCloud Monitoring tracks metrics like CPU, memory, and uptime for health checks.Final Answer:Trace identifies slow requests; Monitoring tracks system health metrics -> Option BQuick Check:Trace + Monitoring = latency + health insights [OK]Quick Trick: Trace = slow requests; Monitoring = health metrics [OK]Common Mistakes:Mixing roles of trace and monitoringAssuming trace stores logs
Master "Cloud Monitoring and Logging" in GCP9 interactive learning modes - each teaches the same concept differentlyLearnWhyDeepVisualTryChallengeProjectRecallTime
More GCP Quizzes Cloud Firestore and Bigtable - Firestore document model - Quiz 4medium Cloud Firestore and Bigtable - Real-time updates with listeners - Quiz 14medium Cloud Functions - Environment variables and secrets - Quiz 7medium Cloud IAM Advanced - Policy troubleshooter - Quiz 10hard Cloud Load Balancing - Cloud CDN integration - Quiz 3easy Cloud Pub/Sub - Pub/Sub vs Cloud Tasks - Quiz 4medium Cloud Pub/Sub - Publishing messages - Quiz 4medium Cloud Run - Request-based auto scaling - Quiz 15hard Cloud SQL and Databases - Cloud SQL pricing - Quiz 3easy Cloud SQL and Databases - High availability configuration - Quiz 13medium