Book Image

Migrating Linux to Microsoft Azure

By : Rithin Skaria, Toni Willberg
Book Image

Migrating Linux to Microsoft Azure

By: Rithin Skaria, Toni Willberg

Overview of this book

With cloud adoption at the core of digital transformation for organizations, there has been a significant demand for deploying and hosting enterprise business workloads in the cloud. Migrating Linux to Microsoft Azure offers a wealth of actionable insights into deploying Linux workload to Azure. You'll begin by learning about the history of IT, operating systems, Unix, Linux, and Windows before moving on to look at the cloud and what things were like before virtualization. This will help anyone new to Linux become familiar with the terms used throughout the book. You'll then explore popular Linux distributions, including RHEL 7, RHEL 8, SLES, Ubuntu Pro, CentOS 7, and more. As you progress, you'll cover the technical details of Linux workloads such as LAMP, Java, and SAP, and understand how to assess your current environment and prepare for your migration to Azure through cloud governance and operations planning. Finally, you'll go through the execution of a real-world migration project and learn how to analyze and debug some common problems that Linux on Azure users may encounter. By the end of this Linux book, you'll be proficient at performing an effective migration of Linux workloads to Azure for your organization.
Table of Contents (8 chapters)

Summary

This chapter started with the history of Linux. The leap that Linux took from being a fun project to being an enterprise-grade operating system was astonishing. Today, Linux is everywhere, from high-end servers to smartphones to smart bulbs. Due to the freedom of customization, there are a lot of variants of Linux, referred to as flavors or distros; there is a distro available for each and every use case. If none of the distros matches your exact requirements and you want to add more features, feel free to customize and build your own Linux. We explored some use case scenarios for Linux and looked at some of the challenges that traditional IT is facing with infrastructure management in on-premises environments.

Every organization runs by numbers. In the Cloud economics section, we examined how running workloads in the cloud can draw profit if we make a CapEx versus OpEx comparison. The upper hand of the cloud not only comes from cost reduction; it's a solution for all...