The clean way to read this scenario is to separate what is merely present in the environment from the single Nutanix construct that actually satisfies the requirement. The correct response is B, meaning “Creates a hub-and-spoke VPC for routing”. A Transit VPC acts as the routing hub for spoke VPCs and is commonly used when administrators want shared services or inter-VPC communication without pushing route complexity into the physical network. In practice, this falls into virtual network design: VPC structure, subnet type, external network behavior, routing intent, and address exposure are what determine the result.
In other words, this is less about broad infrastructure suspicion and more about finding the exact Nutanix decision point that explains the behavior. Notice that A is not appropriate because NAT changes addressing behavior and does not solve the routing or policy condition described in the scenario. C does not fit because it targets a different layer of the Nutanix networking and security stack than the one causing the outcome here. Seen operationally, the correct response is the least disruptive and most deterministic one. It changes the exact Nutanix setting that governs the outcome instead of introducing workarounds elsewhere in the stack.
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