What can you do?

You have created four instances using a single orchestration. Two instances have the High
Availability (HA) policy specifies as Active, one has the HA policy specified as Monitor,
and the fourth has the HA policy specifies as None. What can you do?

You have created four instances using a single orchestration. Two instances have the High
Availability (HA) policy specifies as Active, one has the HA policy specified as Monitor,
and the fourth has the HA policy specifies as None. What can you do?

A.
You can’t delete any of the instances.

B.
Delete all of the instances by stopping the orchestration.

C.
Delete only the instances that have the HA policy specified as Noneor Monitor.

D.
Delete only the instance that has the HA policy specified as None.

E.
Delete only the instance that has the HA policy specified as Monitor.



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james

james

Don’t understand what the question want.

Giovani Hernandez

Giovani Hernandez

is answer B,

Here
https://docs.oracle.com/cloud-machine/latest/stcomputecs/ELUSE/GUID-FA97F2F1-6DAC-4E82-BE02-0C3CADC35E4C.htm#ELUSE-GUID-FA97F2F1-6DAC-4E82-BE02-0C3CADC35E4C

Deleting an Instance
You can delete an instance only if it is in running, shut_down or error state.

Before deleting an instance, consider the following options:

If you want to free the compute resources, then shut down the instance. See Shutting Down an Instance.

If you want to delete all the instances in an orchestration, then stop the orchestration. See Stopping an Orchestration.

If you want to delete only one of the instances in an orchestration, then use the CLI or REST API to delete the instance.

When an instance is deleted, the associated orchestration transitions to the warning status. You need to stop and start this orchestration if you want to associate it with a new instance.