
1500 Questions | GitHub Administration 2026
Course Description
Detailed Exam Domain Coverage
To successfully earn your GitHub Administration certification, you must demonstrate a deep understanding of managing enterprise-grade workflows, security protocols, and organizational structures. These practice tests are meticulously aligned with the official exam domains:
Repository Management (20%): Mastering repository settings, granular permissions, creation workflows, and implementing robust access controls.
Organization Administration (25%): Configuring organization-level settings, managing diverse teams, and overseeing large-scale user permissions.
Security and Compliance (20%): Applying industry-standard security protocols, meeting compliance regulations, and managing vulnerability scanning.
Service Management (20%): Monitoring GitHub services, troubleshooting common administrative issues, and managing platform features.
Collaboration and Integrations (15%): Streamlining third-party integrations, managing API access, and automating administrative tasks.
Course Description
I designed this course to be the ultimate final step in your certification journey. Managing a GitHub environment at scale requires more than just basic knowledge; it requires the ability to make critical decisions under pressure. With 1,500 high-quality practice questions, I provide the rigorous environment you need to ensure you pass the GitHub Administration exam on your very first attempt.
Each question in this bank comes with a comprehensive breakdown. I don't just give you the answer; I explain the logic behind the correct configuration and why other settings might lead to security risks or administrative bottlenecks. This ensures you aren't just memorizing—you're learning.
Sample Practice Questions
Question 1: An organization owner wants to ensure that all repositories created within the "FinTech-Core" organization automatically have a specific security policy applied. Which GitHub feature should be configured?
A, Individual Repository Settings
B, Organization Repository Defaults
C, GitHub Actions Workflow Templates
D, Repository Custom Properties and Rulesets
E, Personal Access Tokens (Classic)
F, Branch Protection Rules only
Correct Answer: D
Explanation:
D (Correct): Repository Rulesets, especially when combined with custom properties, allow administrators to enforce policies across multiple repositories within an organization automatically.
A (Incorrect): Managing individual settings is not scalable and does not ensure that new repositories follow the policy.
B (Incorrect): While defaults set initial states, they do not enforce ongoing security policies as effectively as rulesets.
C (Incorrect): Workflows can automate tasks but rulesets are the primary administrative tool for policy enforcement.
E (Incorrect): Tokens are for authentication, not for defining organization-wide repository policies.
F (Incorrect): Branch protection is a subset of rulesets; rulesets offer broader organizational control.
Question 2: Which role is required to manage billing and payment methods for a GitHub Enterprise account?
A, Repository Administrator
B, Team Maintainer
C, Billing Manager
D, Outside Collaborator
E, Security Manager
F, GitHub App Manager
Correct Answer: C
Explanation:
C (Correct): The Billing Manager role is specifically designed to manage financial aspects without granting full administrative access to code.
A (Incorrect): Repository admins only have control over specific codebases, not organization-level billing.
B (Incorrect): Team maintainers manage members within a team, not the organization's financial settings.
D (Incorrect): Outside collaborators have the least amount of access and cannot touch billing.
E (Incorrect): Security managers oversee alerts and vulnerability reports, not payments.
F (Incorrect): This role is strictly for managing integrations and applications.
Question 3: To comply with a new audit requirement, an administrator needs to export a list of all external collaborators across 50 repositories. What is the most efficient administrative approach?
A, Manually check each repository's settings page
B, Use the GitHub CLI or API to query the organization's members
C, Ask each team lead to send a list via email
D, Disable all external access and wait for complaints
E, Look at the global "Followers" list of the organization
F, Create a new repository to see who joins
Correct Answer: B
Explanation:
B (Correct): For large-scale administrative tasks, using the GitHub API or CLI is the standard professional method for accurate, automated reporting.
A (Incorrect): This is highly inefficient and prone to human error when dealing with 50+ repositories.
C (Incorrect): This is an unverified, non-administrative method that does not meet audit standards.
D (Incorrect): This causes business disruption and is not a reporting method.
E (Incorrect): Followers are not the same as collaborators with repository access.
F (Incorrect): This does not provide a historical or current view of existing access across other repos.
Welcome to the Exams Practice Tests Academy to help you prepare for your GitHub Administration certification.
You can retake the exams as many times as you want
This is a huge original question bank
You get support from instructors if you have questions
Each question has a detailed explanation
Mobile-compatible with the Udemy app
30-days money-back guarantee if you're not satisfied
I hope that by now you're convinced! And there are a lot more questions inside the course.
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