Book Image

Azure for Developers. - Second Edition

By : Kamil Mrzygłód
Book Image

Azure for Developers. - Second Edition

By: Kamil Mrzygłód

Overview of this book

Microsoft Azure is currently one of the fastest growing public cloud service providers thanks to its sophisticated set of services for building fault-tolerant and scalable cloud-based applications. This second edition of Azure for Developers will take you on a journey through the various PaaS services available in Azure, including Azure App Service, Azure Functions, and Azure SQL Databases, showing you how to build a complete and reliable system with ease. Throughout the book, you’ll discover ways to enhance your skills when building cloud-based solutions leveraging different SQL/NoSQL databases, serverless and messaging components, containerized solutions, and even search engines such as Azure Cognitive Search. That’s not all!! The book also covers more advanced scenarios such as scalability best practices, serving static content with Azure CDN, and distributing loads with Azure Traffic Manager, Azure Application Gateway, and Azure Front Door. By the end of this Azure book, you’ll be able to build modern applications on the Azure cloud using the most popular and promising technologies to make your solutions reliable, stable, and efficient.
Table of Contents (32 chapters)
1
Part 1: PaaS and Containers
8
Part 2: Serverless and Reactive Architecture
14
Part 3: Storage, Messaging, and Monitoring
22
Part 4: Performance, Scalability, and Maintainability

Azure Event Hubs security

We have covered some topics regarding working with and developing applications using Azure Event Hubs—now, it is time to learn something more about the security features of this service. In the previous part of this chapter, you used shared access policies, which are the easiest options when you want to restrict access to a hub to some predefined operations (such as listening to events, sending them, or managing Event Hubs). Now I will show you something more about the security model and restricting access to the whole namespace by IP filtering.

Private Link

To connect privately with Azure services, you can use Azure Private Link. While the configuration of such a service is beyond the scope of this book, I would like to make a note here about the availability of that integration. For Azure Event Hubs, Private Link is available starting from the Standard tier onward. That means the Basic tier cannot use that kind of connection...