LOL - thats gorgeous! Well spoken, Kai :) 

> On Oct 28, 2015, at 12:50 PM, Kai Voigt <k...@123.org> wrote:
> 
> No, the correct answer is „Don’t cheat on a Cloudera exam“ :-) This has been 
> reported to certificat...@cloudera.com <mailto:certificat...@cloudera.com>
> 
> Looks like you won’t get that certificate...
> 
>> Am 28.10.2015 um 11:46 schrieb t...@bentzn.com <mailto:t...@bentzn.com>:
>> 
>> The correct answer would be:
>> 
>> do your own homework :-D
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> -----Original Besked-----
>> Fra: "Sajid Mohammed" <sajid.had...@gmail.com 
>> <mailto:sajid.had...@gmail.com>>
>> Til: user@hadoop.apache.org <mailto:user@hadoop.apache.org>
>> Dato: 28-10-2015 11:32
>> Emne: ANSWER PLEASE
>> 
>> You have a cluster running with the fair Scheduler enabled. There are 
>> currently no jobs running on the cluster, and you submit a job A, so that 
>> only job A is running on the cluster. A while later, you submit Job B. now 
>> Job A and Job B are running on the cluster at the same time. How will the 
>> Fair Scheduler handle these two jobs? (Choose 2)
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> A. When Job B gets submitted, it will get assigned tasks, while job A 
>> continues to run with fewer tasks.
>> 
>> B. When Job B gets submitted, Job A has to finish first, before job B can 
>> gets scheduled.
>> 
>> C. When Job A gets submitted, it doesn't consumes all the task slots.
>> 
>> D. When Job A gets submitted, it consumes all the task slots.
>> 
> 
> Kai Voigt                     Am Germaniahafen 1                      
> k...@123.org <mailto:k...@123.org>
>                                       24143 Kiel                              
>         +49 160 96683050
>                                       Germany                                 
>         @KaiVoigt
> 

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