AWS Certified Advanced Networking – Specialty ANS-C00 – Question361

A company has a hybrid environment across its on-premises network and the AWS Cloud. The company wants to use Amazon Elastic File System (Amazon EFS) to store and share data between on-premises services that are required to resolve DNS queries through on-premises DNS servers. The company wants to use a custom domain name to connect to Amazon EFS. The company also wants to avoid using the Amazon EFS target IP address.
What should a network engineer do to meet these requirements?

A.
Create an Amazon Route 53 Resolver outbound endpoint, and configure it for the VPC where Amazon EFS resides. Create a Route 53 public hosted zone, and add a new CNAME record with the value of the Amazon EFS DNS name. Configure forwarding rules on the on-premises DNS servers to forward queries for the custom domain host to the Route 53 public hosted zone.
B. Create an Amazon Route 53 Resolver inbound endpoint, and configure it for the VPC where Amazon EFS resides. Create a Route 53 private hosted zone, and add a new CNAME record with the value of the Amazon EFS DNS name. Configure forwarding rules on the on-premises DNS servers to forward queries for the custom domain host to the Route 53 Resolver.
C. Create an Amazon Route 53 Resolver outbound endpoint, and configure it for the VPC where Amazon EFS resides. Create a Route 53 private hosted zone, and add a new CNAME record with the value of the Amazon EFS DNS name. Configure forwarding rules on the on-premises DNS servers to forward queries for the custom domain host to the Route 53 Resolver.
D. Create an Amazon Route 53 Resolver inbound endpoint, and configure it for the VPC where Amazon EFS resides. Create a Route 53 private hosted zone, and add a new PTR record with the value of the Amazon EFS DNS name. Configure forwarding rules on the on-premises DNS servers to forward queries for the custom domain host to the Route 53 private hosted zone.

Correct Answer: A