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

Deploying web apps to Azure App Service from Azure Container Registry

In this section, you will learn how to deploy an ASP.NET Core application to Azure App Service from ACR. There are two ways you can deploy images from ACR to other Azure services such as App Service, Container Apps, and Azure Functions. In this section, you will learn about enabling the admin user feature in ACR. This one is simple and easy to use. Another deployment option is using the managed identity feature in Azure. The managed identity feature is the recommended practice. You will learn about creating and configuring managed identity for ACR in the next section.

With the following steps, you will learn how to enable the admin user and work with username and password:

  1. To enable the admin user of ACR, you can execute the following command:
    > az acr update -n packtbook --admin-enabled true
  2. Once it is executed, Azure will enable the admin user for ACR with default passwords, which you can query...