Free VMware 2V0-17.25 Actual Exam Questions - Question 13 Discussion

Question No. 13

During creation of a new Organization for All Applications in VCF Automation, which four NSX constructs are automatically configured at the regional networking step? (Choose four.)

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BS
Brian S.
2026-02-21

Maybe B, E, G, and C. The Provider Tier-0 Gateway (B) is definitely a key part of regional setup since it handles routing for that area. Outbound SNAT (E) makes sense to allow VPCs to access external networks without exposing internal IPs. The VPC connectivity profile (G) would be needed to manage how that VPC connects to other components. The DNAT rule (C) could be part of allowing inbound traffic from outside into specific services, which fits with the regional network step. I’m skipping the Transit Gateway (D) here since it’s more about connecting regions or global-level networking.

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BS
Brian S.
2026-02-20

B/E/G/A - Transit Gateway feels more global than regional to me.

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BS
Brian S.
2026-02-20

Option B makes sense since the Provider Tier-0 Gateway is key for routing at the regional level. For the others, I’d also include E because outbound SNAT rules are usually set up to allow internet connectivity for workloads in the new org. Option G fits too since the VPC connectivity profile ties the region's networking together. That leaves me thinking A is right as well — the Default VPC probably gets created automatically to provide a baseline network environment before you add anything more custom. I’d skip D and F here because Transit Gateways and VDS are generally handled outside this sp

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MD
Michael D.
2026-02-18

D imo, I’d rule out F since the VDS is usually pre-existing or created earlier, not specifically at the regional networking step. The Transit Gateway (D) fits here because it handles traffic between different tiers and regions, so it being auto-configured at this step makes sense. That plus B (Provider Tier-0 Gateway) and E (SNAT) seem like a solid combo. For the fourth, I’d say G (VPC connectivity profile), because it ties the VPC to the network setup, which is needed early on. So D, B, E, G feels right from a networking architecture standpoint.

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RG
Rizwan G.
2026-01-28

A/D/E/G? The Default VPC (A) seems like a no-brainer since you need that logical segmentation right away. Transit Gateway (D) fits since it handles routing between regions automatically in VCF. SNAT (E) is necessary for outbound traffic, probably set up by default. As for G, the connectivity profile sounds like something that ties these constructs together, so it might be auto-created too. The Provider Tier-0 Gateway (B) feels like a manual step in some setups, so maybe not automatic here. C and F don’t really fit the regional networking step based on what I know.

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Osama F.
2026-01-27

I think B and E are definite because the Provider Tier-0 Gateway and SNAT rules are key for routing and outbound traffic. Also, A seems right since the Default VPC usually gets auto-created to segment the network. For the last one, I’d go with G — the VPC connectivity profile helps tie things together at the regional level, so it makes sense it’s set up automatically rather than D (Transit Gateway), which is probably more for multi-region setups. So my picks: A, B, E, and G.

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OF
Osama F.
2026-01-26

I’m thinking A and B are solid picks since Default VPC and Provider Tier-0 Gateway are essentials. Then E for SNAT because outbound traffic needs translation, and D for Transit Gateway since it connects regions. So, A, B, D, and E.

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RA
Ravi A.
2026-01-20

The Provider Tier-0 Gateway (B) is a must, plus SNAT (E); Default VPC (A) fits too.

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Ahmed I.
2026-01-17

Option B and E make sense since Provider Tier-0 Gateway and outbound SNAT are basics for regional networking. Also, G seems related to VPC connectivity profiles. The rest don’t seem directly tied to that step.

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