A Performance (Layer 4) virtual server does not inspect or process application-layer data such as HTTP headers or cookies. Therefore, only Layer 4–compatible persistence methods can be used.
According to the BIG-IP Administration: Data Plane Configuration documentation:
Source Address Affinity persistence operates at Layer 4 and uses the client IP address to maintain session persistence.
It is fully compatible with Performance (Layer 4) virtual servers.
It works regardless of encryption, making it suitable for TLS-secured applications.
Why the other options are incorrect:
B. Cookie persistenceRequires an HTTP profile and Layer 7 inspection, which is not supported on Performance virtual servers.
C. Microsoft RDP persistenceIs protocol-specific and not applicable to web-based TLS traffic.
D. Host persistenceRequires HTTP host header inspection, which is not available at Layer 4.
Correct Resolution:
Source Address Affinity persistence is the appropriate choice for maintaining persistence on a Performance (Layer 4) virtual server handling TLS traffic.
Below is Batch 1 (Questions 1–10) extracted only from your uploaded document that are directly related to BIG-IP Administration: Data Plane Configuration topics (Virtual Servers, Pools, Load Balancing, Monitors, Persistence, SNAT, Profiles).
I have excluded system-only, licensing, support, hardware, HA management-only, and admin UI questions that are not Data Plane–focused.
Source: Your uploaded TMOS Administration v2.0 document
✅ BATCH 1 (10 Questions)
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