Book Image

Azure Architecture Explained

By : David Rendón, Brett Hargreaves
Book Image

Azure Architecture Explained

By: David Rendón, Brett Hargreaves

Overview of this book

Azure is a sophisticated technology that requires a detailed understanding to reap its full potential and employ its advanced features. This book provides you with a clear path to designing optimal cloud-based solutions in Azure, by delving into the platform's intricacies. You’ll begin by understanding the effective and efficient security management and operation techniques in Azure to implement the appropriate configurations in Microsoft Entra ID. Next, you’ll explore how to modernize your applications for the cloud, examining the different computation and storage options, as well as using Azure data solutions to help migrate and monitor workloads. You’ll also find out how to build your solutions, including containers, networking components, security principles, governance, and advanced observability. With practical examples and step-by-step instructions, you’ll be empowered to work on infrastructure-as-code to effectively deploy and manage resources in your environment. By the end of this book, you’ll be well-equipped to navigate the world of cloud computing confidently.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Part 1 – Effective and Efficient Security Management and Operations in Azure
5
Part 2 – Architecting Compute and Network Solutions
12
Part 3 – Making the Most of Infrastructure-as-Code for Azure

Understanding the relationship between continuous integration, continuous delivery, and pipelines

As organizations adopt a cloud strategy, they realize the benefits of automating the build, test steps, and deployment steps. By automating the entire software delivery process, organizations can deliver software faster and with more confidence while reducing the risk of errors.

Continuous Integration (CI) and Continuous Delivery (CD) are practices that have evolved from Agile software development and DevOps culture that involve automatically building and testing code changes as soon as they are pushed to a source control repository, such as Git.

This helps catch and fix issues early in the development process, reducing the risk of more significant problems later on. They emerged in response to the need for faster and more reliable software delivery in a rapidly changing software development landscape.

As Agile and DevOps practices gained popularity, CI and CD became widely adopted...