Streaming Telemetry as a Push Model in Cisco Devices

Streaming Telemetry as a Push Model in Cisco Devices

Question

Which behavior defines streaming telemetry as a push model in Cisco devices?

Answers

Explanations

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A. B. C. D.

D.

Streaming telemetry is a method of monitoring and collecting real-time network data from Cisco devices. It uses a push model, where the network devices proactively send telemetry data to a collector endpoint. This is in contrast to a pull model, where monitoring clients actively request data from network devices.

Therefore, the correct answer is (B) Monitoring clients are pulling data from the network to see real-time statistics is not a behavior of streaming telemetry as it is a push model.

Option (A) is incorrect because it describes the behavior of generating telemetry data and events, which is not specific to streaming telemetry.

Option (C) is partially correct but incomplete because it describes the transport protocol used to transmit telemetry data (gRPC), but it does not fully define streaming telemetry as a push model.

Option (D) is incorrect because it describes the configuration of endpoints using telemetry data, which is not specific to the behavior of streaming telemetry.

In summary, the defining behavior of streaming telemetry as a push model is that it proactively sends telemetry data from network devices to a collector endpoint, without requiring active requests from monitoring clients.