Which two statements correctly describe VM-Host affinity rules? (Choose two.)
A.
When there is more than one VM-Host affinity rule in a vSphere DRS cluster, the rules are applied equally.
B.
After creating a VM-Host affinity rule, its ability to function in relation to other rules is predetermined.
C.
When there is more than one VM-Host affinity rule in a vSphere DRS cluster, the rules will be ranked.
D.
After creating a VM-Host affinity rule, its ability to function in relation to other rules is not checked.
Explanation:
If you create more than one VM-Host affinity rule, the rules are not ranked, but are applied equally. Be aware
that this has implications for how the rules interact. For example, a virtual machine that belongs to two DRS
groups, each of which belongs to a different required rule, can run only on hosts that belong to both of the host
DRS groups represented in the rules.
https://pubs.vmware.com/vsphere-55/index.jsp?topic=%2Fcom.vmware.vsphere.resmgmt.doc%
2FGUID-793013E2-0976-43B7-9A00-340FA76859D0.html
A,D
https://docs.vmware.com/en/VMware-vSphere/6.5/com.vmware.vsphere.resmgmt.doc/GUID-793013E2-0976-43B7-9A00-340FA76859D0.html
A, D
If you create more than one VM-Host affinity rule, the rules are not ranked, but are applied equally.
When you create a VM-Host affinity rule, its ability to function in relation to other rules is not checked. So it is possible for you to create a rule that conflicts with the other rules you are using. When two VM-Host affinity rules conflict, the older one takes precedence and the newer rule is disabled. DRS only tries to satisfy enabled rules and disabled rules are ignored.
AD
https://docs.vmware.com/en/VMware-vSphere/6.5/com.vmware.vsphere.resmgmt.doc/GUID-793013E2-0976-43B7-9A00-340FA76859D0.html