Book Image

A Developer's Guide to Building Resilient Cloud Applications with Azure

By : Hamida Rebai Trabelsi
Book Image

A Developer's Guide to Building Resilient Cloud Applications with Azure

By: Hamida Rebai Trabelsi

Overview of this book

To deliver software at a faster rate and reduced costs, companies with stable legacy systems and growing data volumes are trying to modernize their applications and accelerate innovation, but this is no easy matter. A Developer’s Guide to Building Resilient Cloud Applications with Azure helps you overcome these application modernization challenges to build secure and reliable cloud-based applications on Azure and connect them to databases with the help of easy-to-follow examples. The book begins with a basic definition of serverless and event-driven architecture and Database-as-a-Service, before moving on to an exploration of the different services in Azure, namely Azure API Management using the gateway pattern, event-driven architecture, Event Grid, Azure Event Hubs, Azure message queues, FaaS using Azure Functions, and the database-oriented cloud. Throughout the chapters, you’ll learn about creating, importing, and managing APIs and Service Fabric in Azure, and discover how to ensure continuous integration and deployment in Azure to fully automate the software delivery process, that is, the build and release process. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to build and deploy cloud-oriented applications using APIs, serverless, Service Fabric, Azure Functions, and Event Grid technologies.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
1
Part 1: Building Cloud-Oriented Apps Using Patterns and Technologies
5
Part 2: Connecting Your Application with Azure Databases
13
Part 3: Ensuring Continuous Integration and Continuous Container Deployment on Azure

Exercise 3 – deploying SQL Managed Instance

If we go back to the SQL deployment page shown in Figure 7.2, we can now select SQL managed instances. Leave Resource type as Single instance and click on Create:

Figure 7.19 – Create a SQL managed instance

Figure 7.19 – Create a SQL managed instance

In the Basics tab, we will introduce the information related to the project details, the managed instance details, and authentication; it is similar to a SQL database.

In the Networking tab, we will configure the virtual network and public endpoint. You can leave the default configuration; it depends on your internal configuration.

In the Security tab, we need to enable Microsoft Defender for SQL. We can configure system-assigned and user-assigned managed identities to enable central access management between this database and other Azure resources.

We have more tabs, such as Additional settings, which are used to customize additional configuration parameters, including geo-replication...