junos-global zone—Defined in the JUNOS defaults and cannot be configured by the user. The global zone serves as a storage area for static NAT addresses and can be used in policies like any other security zone.
The junos-host zone is a system-defined zone. You can
configure the junos-host zone in a security policy to
provide granular control for which host-inbound or
host-outbound traffic is allowed in or out of a security
zone on the SRX device.
Functional zones, such as the management zone, cannot
be used in a security policy.
http://www.juniper.net/techpubs/software/junos-security/junos-security95/junos-security-swconfig-security/id-29204.html
junos-global zone—Defined in the JUNOS defaults and cannot be configured by the user. The global zone serves as a storage area for static NAT addresses and can be used in policies like any other security zone.
is wrong:
http://www.juniper.net/documentation/en_US/junos12.1/topics/concept/zone-security-understanding.html
read the new study guide
The junos-host zone is a system-defined zone. You can
configure the junos-host zone in a security policy to
provide granular control for which host-inbound or
host-outbound traffic is allowed in or out of a security
zone on the SRX device.
Functional zones, such as the management zone, cannot
be used in a security policy.
D is correct!!!!
Read JNCIS-SEC Study Guide—Part 1
I have the same idea. C
It’s onerous to find educated individuals on this topic, but you sound like you understand what you’re speaking about! Thanks
http://www.bastcilkdoptb.com/