Book Image

A Developer's Guide to .NET in Azure

By : Anuraj Parameswaran, Tamir Al Balkhi
Book Image

A Developer's Guide to .NET in Azure

By: Anuraj Parameswaran, Tamir Al Balkhi

Overview of this book

A Developer’s Guide to .NET in Azure helps you embark on a transformative journey through Microsoft Azure that is tailored to .NET developers. This book is a curated compendium that’ll enable you to master the creation of resilient, scalable, and highly available applications. The book is divided into four parts, with Part 1 demystifying Azure for you and emphasizing the portal's utility and seamless integration. The chapters in this section help you configure your workspace for optimal Azure synergy. You’ll then move on to Part 2, where you’ll explore serverless computing, microservices, containerization, Dapr, and Azure Kubernetes Service for scalability, and build pragmatic, cost-effective applications using Azure Functions and Container apps. Part 3 delves into data and storage, showing you how to utilize Azure Blob Storage for unstructured data, Azure SQL Database for structured data, and Azure Cosmos DB for document-oriented data. The final part teaches you about messaging and security, utilizing Azure App Configuration, Event Hubs, Service Bus, Key Vault, and Azure AD B2C for robust, secure applications. By the end of this book, you’ll have mastered Azure's responsive infrastructure for exceptional applications.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Part 1: An Introduction to Your Environment
3
Part 2: Serverless and Microservices
8
Part 3: Data and Storage
12
Part 4: Messaging Mechanisms and Security

Setting up authentication in Azure Key Vault

Azure Key Vault’s authentication is carried out in collaboration with Azure Active Directory (Azure AD), which is accountable for verifying the identity of a security principal. A security principal refers to an entity, such as a user, group, service, or application that seeks permission to access Azure resources. Each security principal is assigned a distinct object ID by Azure. An individual with a profile in Azure AD is recognized as a user security principal. On the other hand, a group security principal is used to identify a collection of users that are established in Azure AD. When roles or permissions are assigned to the group, all members within the group receive them. A service principal is a security principal type that represents an application or service instead of a user or group. The object ID of a service principal serves as its username, and its client secret serves as its password. In the following section, we will...