Book Image

Optimizing Microsoft Azure Workloads

By : Rithin Skaria
Book Image

Optimizing Microsoft Azure Workloads

By: Rithin Skaria

Overview of this book

It’s easy to learn and deploy resources in Microsoft Azure, without worrying about resource optimization. However, for production or mission critical workloads, it’s crucial that you follow best practices for resource deployment to attain security, reliability, operational excellence and performance. Apart from these aspects, you need to account for cost considerations, as it’s the leading reason for almost every organization’s cloud transformation. In this book, you’ll learn to leverage Microsoft Well-Architected Framework to optimize your workloads in Azure. This Framework is a set of recommended practices developed by Microsoft based on five aligned pillars; cost optimization, performance, reliability, operational excellence, and security. You’ll explore each of these pillars and discover how to perform an assessment to determine the quality of your existing workloads. Through the book, you’ll uncover different design patterns and procedures related to each of the Well-Architected Framework pillars. By the end of this book, you’ll be well-equipped to collect and assess data from an Azure environment and perform the necessary upturn of your Azure workloads.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
1
Part 1: Well-Architected Framework Fundamentals
4
Part 2: Exploring the Well-Architected Framework Pillars and Their Principles
10
Part 3: Assessment and Recommendations

Summary

In this chapter, we started with an introduction to the WAF, and we discussed the five pillars of the WAF. The pillars are cost optimization, operational excellence, performance efficiency, reliability, and security. We briefly covered the concepts and principles of these pillars. Adopting the best practices and recommendations provided by these pillars of the WAF will help you to improve the quality of your Azure workloads.

Then, we discussed the elements of the WAF; recommendations and best practices of the WAF are derived from these elements. In simple words, elements act as the data source for the WAF. There are six elements of the WAF: Azure Well-Architected Review, Azure Advisor, documentation, partners, support, and service offers, reference architecture, and design principles. Understanding these elements will help you learn the best practices that are used to build the WAF. Design patterns and some recommendations for design principles are not included in this chapter as they are out of the scope of the book; nevertheless, you can always refer to the shared links to learn more.

As mentioned in the introduction of this chapter, there are multiple frameworks for the cloud. In the next chapter, we will understand the difference between the CAF and WAF. Readers often tend to get confused between these frameworks, so let’s take deep dive into the CAF versus the WAF.