Compare Architecture Models for Security+ (SY0-701)

Understand on-premises, cloud, virtualization, IoT, ICS, and infrastructure-as-code models through the lens Security+ uses.

Security+ treats architecture models as security context, not as vendor marketing categories. The exam wants you to understand what risks and control priorities change when the environment shifts from on-premises to cloud, from traditional servers to virtualized workloads, or from enterprise IT to IoT and ICS systems.

IoT: Internet of Things devices such as sensors, cameras, or embedded systems that often have limited patching, visibility, or physical protection.

ICS / OT: Industrial control systems and operational technology used to run physical processes where safety and uptime matter heavily.

Shared responsibility: The split between provider-managed and customer-managed layers, especially in cloud environments.

What the exam is really testing

CompTIA is usually checking whether you can:

  • identify which layer the organization still owns in each model
  • recognize when safety, availability, or constrained-device realities change the “obvious” security answer
  • understand that a modern deployment model changes attack surface as much as it changes operations

Architecture model comparison

ModelSecurity angle that matters most
On-premisesphysical security, local network segmentation, direct infrastructure ownership
Cloudshared responsibility, identity-first controls, exposure through misconfiguration
Virtualizationhypervisor trust, tenant isolation, snapshot hygiene, east-west visibility
IoTconstrained devices, weak update paths, embedded defaults, physical exposure
ICS / OTsafety, availability, legacy protocols, fragile change windows
IaCrepeatable secure configuration, reviewable change history, drift reduction

Ownership and exposure lens

ModelMain ownership or exposure question
On-premisesHow well does the organization secure the full stack, facility, and local network?
CloudWhich controls stay with the customer under shared responsibility?
VirtualizationHow strong is isolation between guests and the host layer?
IoTCan the device be updated, monitored, and physically protected realistically?
ICS / OTWill the control preserve safety and uptime for operational processes?
IaCIs the secure state reviewable, repeatable, and protected from bad template drift?

The exam habit to build

Do not ask only “which model is safer?” Ask:

  • who owns which layer?
  • where is the biggest attack surface?
  • what kind of change control is realistic?
  • which control would break availability or safety if applied carelessly?

Those questions make ICS and IoT especially important. Security+ likes to test environments where aggressive security moves can disrupt operations.

Shared-responsibility sketch

    flowchart LR
	  A["Deployment model"] --> B["Provider-managed layers"]
	  A --> C["Customer-managed layers"]
	  B --> D["Service availability and platform control"]
	  C --> E["Identity, configuration, data, and access decisions"]

What to notice:

  • cloud use does not remove the customer’s duty to configure access and protect data
  • the question is often not “who owns everything,” but “which layer is still your responsibility”
  • Security+ commonly uses misconfiguration examples to test this judgment

IaC is a security topic

Infrastructure as code belongs here because it changes how security is applied:

  • configuration becomes reviewable and version-controlled
  • secure baselines can be repeated consistently
  • drift is easier to detect
  • mistakes can also scale faster if templates are wrong

Model chooser

Scenario clueStrongest architectural concern
Legacy industrial process or facility controlsafety, uptime, and cautious change management
Small embedded device at the edgephysical exposure, patchability, and weak defaults
Multi-tenant virtual environmentisolation, hypervisor trust, and visibility
Cloud storage exposed publiclycustomer-side configuration and IAM responsibility
Repeated environment drift across deploymentsIaC and reviewable baseline enforcement

Common traps

  • applying ordinary enterprise IT assumptions to ICS or OT
  • forgetting that cloud misconfiguration is often a customer-side security problem
  • treating virtualization as only a performance topic
  • thinking IaC removes the need for review just because it is automated
  • assuming IoT devices can always be secured with the same controls as full enterprise endpoints

What strong answers usually do

  • identify which layer the organization still owns before recommending a control
  • adjust the answer when safety, uptime, or patchability limits what is realistic
  • treat architecture choice as a change in attack surface, not just a hosting preference
  • recognize when the right answer is more about segmentation, identity, or reviewable configuration than about one appliance

Harder scenario question

A manufacturer wants to deploy a new security control that would aggressively reboot systems when suspicious behavior is detected. The same environment includes industrial controllers running physical processes where unexpected interruption could create safety risk. Which answer is strongest?

A. Apply the same aggressive control everywhere because stronger response is always better B. Evaluate the OT environment separately because safety and availability constraints may require a different control strategy and change process C. Move all controllers to guest Wi-Fi D. Disable all monitoring in the plant

Best answer: B. Security+ expects you to recognize that ICS or OT environments require more careful balancing of safety, uptime, and security response.

Quiz

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Continue with 3.2 Enterprise Infrastructure Security to connect architecture choice to real network and access-control design.