5 Azure Introduction 1
5 Azure Introduction 1
AZURE
(PRESENTED BY ONUORAH CHUKWUBUIKEM EMMANUEL
What is Azure? | Pay-As-You-Go
Microsoft Azure is a cloud computing platform and infrastructure created by Microsoft for
building, deploying, and managing applications and services through a global network of
Microsoft-managed data centers.
Microsoft Azure is a growing collection of integrated cloud services—analytics, computing,
database, mobile, networking, storage, and web—for moving faster, achieving more, and saving
money.
Top 10 Cloud Computing Provider
1. Amazon Web Services
2. Microsoft Azure
3. IBM
4. Google Cloud Platform
5. Salesforce.com
6. Adobe
7. Oracle Cloud
8. SAP
9. Rackspace
10. Workday
Pros and Cons
PROS / High Availability, Security, Scalability, Cost-Effectiveness(Pay-as-you-go)
Windows Azure has a great feature set, is quite easy to use, and is one of a handful of cloud
hosts to support ASP.NET.
CONS / Requires Management, Requires Platform Expertise
It doesn’t explicitly support PHP or Ruby.
Some Best Features
1. Familiarity of Windows
2. 64-bit Windows VMs
3. Azure SDK
4. Azure Search in CRM
5. Azure Network Security Groups (ACLs)
6. Pay-as-you-go service
7. RDP, VM, SSD Storage, multi OS images etc.
Azure CRM Portal: Login Screen
Azure CRM Portal: Home Screen
Comparison: Azure App Service, Virtual
Machines, Service Fabric, and Cloud
Services
App Service is the best choice for most web apps. Deployment and management are integrated
into the platform, sites can scale quickly to handle high traffic loads, and the built-in load
balancing and traffic manager provide high availability.
Service Fabric is a good choice if you’re creating a new app or re-writing an existing app to use a
microservice architecture.
Cloud Services is similar to Service Fabric in degree of control versus ease of use, but it’s now a
legacy service and Service Fabric is recommended for new development.
If you have an existing application that would require substantial modifications to run in App
Service or Service Fabric, you could choose Virtual Machines in order to simplify migrating to the
cloud. Azure Virtual Machines is Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS), while App Service and Service
Fabric are Platform-as-a-Service (Paas).
SPI: SASS, PASS & IAAS
Software As A Service: SAAS
Software as a service (SaaS) is a software distribution model in which a third-party provider
hosts applications and makes them available to customers over the Internet.
SAAS Model − E-mail (Gmail, Yahoo, etc.)
Platform AS A Service: PASS
PaaS or platform as a service model provides you computing platforms which typically includes
operating system, programming language execution environment, database, web server.
technically It is a layer on top of IaaS as the second thing you demand after Infrastructure is
platform.
<EndpointAcls>
<EndpointAcl role="YourRole" endPoint="YourEndpoint" accessControl="ACL_Common" />
</EndpointAcls>
Create New VM
Create New VM
You have to select a resource group
Resource Group
A container that holds related resources for an Azure solution. The resource group can include
all the resources for the solution, or only those resources that you want to manage as a group.
You decide how you want to allocate resources to resource groups based on what makes the
most sense for your organization.
Benefits of using Resource Manager
⮚You can deploy, manage, and monitor all the resources for your solution as a group, rather than
handling these resources individually.
⮚You can repeatedly deploy your solution throughout the development lifecycle and have
confidence your resources are deployed in a consistent state.
⮚You can manage your infrastructure through declarative templates rather than scripts.
⮚You can define the dependencies between resources so they are deployed in the correct order.
⮚You can apply access control to all services in your resource group because Role-Based Access
Control (RBAC) is natively integrated into the management platform.
⮚You can apply tags to resources to logically organize all the resources in your subscription.
⮚You can clarify your organization's billing by viewing costs for a group of resources sharing the
same tag.
Network security groups
A network security group (NSG) contains a list of access control list (ACL) rules that allow or deny
network traffic to your VM instances in a Virtual Network.
NSGs can be associated with either subnets or individual VM instances within that subnet. When
a NSG is associated with a subnet, the ACL rules apply to all the VM instances in that subnet.
In addition, traffic to an individual VM can be restricted further by associating a NSG directly to
that VM.
Network security groups
Add inbound security rule
Inbound and Outbound Rules
Inbound rules: These are to do with other things accessing your computer. If you are running a
Web Server on your computer then you will have to tell the Firewall that outsiders are allowed
to connect to it.
Outbound rules: These are so that you can let some programs use the Internet, and Block
others. You will want to let your Web Browser (Internet Explorer, Firefox, Safari, Chrome,
Opera...) have access to the Internet, so you will tell Windows Firewall that it's allowed.
Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP)
Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) is a proprietary protocol developed by Microsoft, which
provides a user with a graphical interface to connect to another computer over a network
connection.
Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP)
In ACS you have to enabled it with
certificate.
So first you have to create certificate.
THANK YOU