Book Image

Implementing Azure Solutions - Second Edition

By : Florian Klaffenbach, Markus Klein, Sebastian Hoppe, Oliver Michalski, Jan-Henrik Damaschke
Book Image

Implementing Azure Solutions - Second Edition

By: Florian Klaffenbach, Markus Klein, Sebastian Hoppe, Oliver Michalski, Jan-Henrik Damaschke

Overview of this book

<p>Microsoft Azure offers numerous solutions that can shape the future of any business. However, the major challenge that architects and administrators face lies in implementing these solutions. </p><p>Implementing Azure Solutions helps you overcome this challenge by enabling you to implement Azure Solutions effectively. The book begins by guiding you in choosing the backend structure for your solutions. You will then work with the Azure toolkit and learn how to use Azure Managed Apps to share your solutions with the Azure service catalog. The book then focuses on various implementation techniques and best practices such as implementing Azure Cloud Services by configuring, deploying, and managing cloud services. As you progress through the chapters, you’ll learn how to work with Azure-managed Kubernetes and Azure Container Services. </p><p>By the end of the book, you will be able to build robust cloud solutions on Azure.</p>
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

Cloud brokering

With cloud brokering, you migrate your workload depending on the price and needs from one cloud provider to another. That can be on a day-to-day or more frequent basis. This brokering was the first intention of businesses to save money with the cloud, but in practice, brokering only works with very simple IaaS or very standardized PaaS solutions. Most of the more complex workloads, such as Microsoft Exchange, SAP, and Oracle depend on drivers and you always have different hypervisor solutions between your cloud providers. In addition to that, IaaS workloads are very costly compared with solutions built on PaaS. So, looking down and ahead the timeline, the second multi-cloud model has become more common—best of breed