Free Cisco 350-801 Actual Exam Questions - Question 12 Discussion

Refer to the exhibit. A collaboration engineer adds an analog gateway to a Cisco UCM cluster. The
engineer chooses MGCP over SCCP as the gateway protocol. Which two actions ensure that the
gateway registers? (Choose two.)
B/C? You need to enable MGCP with “mgcp” and tell the gateway to talk MGCP to the UCM with “ccm-manager mgcp.” D isn’t enough by itself to register.
I think C makes sense since the gateway needs to run MGCP mode. But what about D? Isn't "ccm-manager config" also required to get the gateway recognized by UCM?
Maybe B and C since enabling MGCP mode and ccm-manager mgcp are key steps.
This one feels like A and B again. Marking patterns as off-net is essential so UCM knows what calls to block, and tweaking the Block OffNet to OffNet Transfer parameter stops calls from sneaking through via transfers. The other options don’t really address the root cause of toll fraud in UCM itself. C and D are just extra steps that don’t fix the core config, and E’s about network security rather than UCM settings. So, I’d pick A and B here too.
Option A makes sure calls are flagged correctly as off-net, and B tightens control over call transfers that could bypass fraud settings. The others don’t directly stop unauthorized international calls in UCM.
A/B? Marking patterns as off-net helps identify external calls, and tweaking the Block OffNet transfer stops unauthorized rerouting. C and E feel less direct for toll fraud in this Cisco context.
B imo, disabling off-net transfer cuts unauthorized reroutes; A makes patterns explicit.
I think option C doesn't really fit here because disabling call forwarding won’t directly stop toll fraud on international routes; it's more about redirecting calls locally. Option E sounds logical, but just routing calls through a firewall isn’t a direct UCM config change; it’s more of a network-level control. So focusing on what you can tweak inside UCM, marking patterns off-net (A) and modifying Block OffNet settings (B) seem like the key steps since they directly control how calls are classified and blocked. Anyone else see it differently?
B and A; disabling off-net transfer and marking patterns stops unwanted calls.
Seen something like this before, option A and B seem right.