Book Image

Azure PowerShell Quick Start Guide

By : Thomas Mitchell
Book Image

Azure PowerShell Quick Start Guide

By: Thomas Mitchell

Overview of this book

As an IT professional, it is important to keep up with cloud technologies and learn to manage those technologies. PowerShell is a critical tool that must be learned in order to effectively and more easily manage many Azure resources. This book is designed to teach you to leverage PowerShell to enable you to perform many day-to-day tasks in Microsoft Azure. Taking you through the basic tasks of installing Azure PowerShell and connecting to Azure, you will learn to properly connect to an Azure tenant with PowerShell. Next, you will dive into tasks such as deploying virtual machines with PowerShell, resizing them, and managing their power states with PowerShell. Then, you will learn how to complete more complex Azure tasks with PowerShell, such as deploying virtual machines from custom images, creating images from existing virtual machines, and creating and managing of data disks. Later, you will learn how to snapshot virtual machines, how to encrypt virtual machines, and how to leverage load balancers to ensure high availability with PowerShell. By the end of this book, you will have developed dozens of PowerShell skills that are invaluable in the deployment and management of Azure virtual machines.
Table of Contents (7 chapters)

Snapshotting an Azure VM disk

Another way to create custom virtual machines is to deploy them from an existing snapshot from another virtual machine. To do this, you first need to create a snapshot of an existing virtual machine.

The following exercises show you how to create the snapshot configuration for an existing virtual machine and how to take a snapshot of the disk using the New-AzureRmSnapshot cmdlet.

Setting snapshot parameters

Before snapshotting a virtual machine, a few parameters/variables need to be set so they can be more easily referenced later. We need to set the resource group name, the location where the source virtual machine resides, and a name for the snapshot.

Run the following commands to set the parameters...