Free Google Cloud-Digital-Leader Actual Exam Questions - Question 5 Discussion

Question No. 5
What are the network requirements for Private Google Access?
Select one option, then reveal solution.
US
OE
Omar E.
2026-02-19

Maybe B, since routing is essential to reach Google API IPs privately.

0
OE
Omar E.
2026-02-15

B/D? I agree the routing part is crucial, so B has to be right. But D isn’t totally off either if you consider that routing alone might not be enough without proper firewall rules. The question says “network requirements,” and routes are clearly one, but maybe firewall rules count too? Since A is about enabling APIs automatically, which doesn’t happen here, C is out. I’d stick with B because of the routes for sure, but keep in mind that just having routes might not cover all network aspects fully.

0
JA
Jason A.
2026-02-15

B. The routes are definitely the main thing here. Without them, your instances won’t know how to reach the Google API IPs privately. This setup is about networking, not about enabling APIs automatically, so A doesn’t really apply. Also, since the question focuses on network requirements, firewall rules aren’t explicitly mentioned, so B fits best as the core network need.

0
DQ
Daniel Q.
2026-01-27

It’s B, since the key is having correct routing to Google’s API IPs.

0
DQ
Daniel Q.
2026-01-21

Guessing B again. Without proper routing to Google’s IP ranges, the VMs can't reach the APIs, so setting routes is essential. Option A seems unrelated to the network setup itself.

0
AC
Ali C.
2026-01-20

Probably B here. Since Private Google Access allows VMs without external IPs to access Google services, it seems logical that you’d need routes set up for the specific Google API IP ranges. A can’t be right because enabling APIs is more of a permissions thing, not something that happens just by configuring network access. So yeah, B fits best given what Private Google Access is designed to do.

0
AC
Ali C.
2026-01-19

I agree that A sounds wrong because Private Google Access doesn’t automatically enable APIs. B makes sense since specific routes are needed for access. Does anyone think D could be valid if these aren’t the exact requirements?

0
AC
Ali C.
2026-01-15

Maybe B. Private Google Access is about allowing instances without external IPs to reach Google APIs, so it makes sense that your network needs routes to those IP ranges. A sounds off since Private Google Access doesn’t just automatically enable any API-there’s more to it than that. C seems unlikely because A is probably wrong, and D doesn’t fit since something has to be set up for it to work.

0