Book Image

Microsoft Azure Architect Technologies: Exam Guide AZ-300

By : Sjoukje Zaal
Book Image

Microsoft Azure Architect Technologies: Exam Guide AZ-300

By: Sjoukje Zaal

Overview of this book

From designing solutions on Azure to configuring and managing virtual networks, AZ-300 certification can help you achieve all this and more. Whether you want to get certified or gain hands-on experience in administering, developing, and architecting Azure solutions, this study guide will help you get started. The book features not only the different exam objectives, but also guides you through configuring, managing, securing, and architecting Azure resources. Divided into five modules, this book will systematically take you through the different concepts and features as you advance through the sections. The first module demonstrates how to deploy and configure infrastructure. You will cover techniques related to implementing workloads and security, before learning how to create and deploy apps in the next module. To build on your knowledge, the final two modules will get you up to speed with implementing authentication, data security, and application and platform monitoring, along with covering Azure storage, alerting, and automation strategies. Finally, you’ll work through exam-based mock tests with answers to boost your confidence in passing the exam. By the end of this book, you’ll have learned the concepts and techniques you need to know in order to prepare for the AZ-300 exam, along with the skills to design effective solutions on Microsoft Azure.
Table of Contents (30 chapters)
1
Section 1: Deploying and Configuring Infrastructure
9
Section 2: Implementing Workloads and Security
16
Section 3: Creating and Deploying Apps
19
Section 4: Implementing Authentication and Secure Data
22
Section 5: Developing for the Cloud and for Azure Storage
26
Mock Questions
27
Mock Answers

SAS and access keys

By using an SAS, you can provide a way to grant limited access to objects and data that are stored inside your storage account to the clients that connect to it. Using an SAS, you don't have to expose your access keys to the clients.

When you create a storage account, primary and secondary access keys are created. Both of these keys can grant administrative access to your account and all of the resources within it. Exposing these keys can also open your storage account to negligent or malicious use. SAS provides a safe alternative to this that will allow clients to read, write, and delete data in your storage account according to the permissions you've explicitly granted, without the need for an account key.

In the next section, we're going to look at how to manage our access keys and how to generate an SAS for our storage account.

Managing access keys

To manage access keys, perform the following steps:

  1. Navigate to the Azure portal by opening https...