Book Image

Azure for Architects - Third Edition

By : Ritesh Modi, Jack Lee, Rithin Skaria
Book Image

Azure for Architects - Third Edition

By: Ritesh Modi, Jack Lee, Rithin Skaria

Overview of this book

Thanks to its support for high availability, scalability, security, performance, and disaster recovery, Azure has been widely adopted to create and deploy different types of application with ease. Updated for the latest developments, this third edition of Azure for Architects helps you get to grips with the core concepts of designing serverless architecture, including containers, Kubernetes deployments, and big data solutions. You'll learn how to architect solutions such as serverless functions, you'll discover deployment patterns for containers and Kubernetes, and you'll explore large-scale big data processing using Spark and Databricks. As you advance, you'll implement DevOps using Azure DevOps, work with intelligent solutions using Azure Cognitive Services, and integrate security, high availability, and scalability into each solution. Finally, you'll delve into Azure security concepts such as OAuth, OpenConnect, and managed identities. By the end of this book, you'll have gained the confidence to design intelligent Azure solutions based on containers and serverless functions.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
20
Index

Summary

There are numerous services available on Azure, and most of them can be combined to create real solutions. This chapter explained the three most important services provided by Azure—regions, storage, and networks. They form the backbone of the majority of solutions deployed on any cloud. This chapter provided details about these services and how their configuration and provisioning can affect design decisions.

Important considerations for both storage and networks were detailed in this chapter. Both networks and storage provide lots of choices, and it is important to choose an appropriate configuration based on your requirements.

Finally, some of the important design patterns related to messaging, such as Competing Consumers, Priority Queue, and Load Leveling, were described. Patterns such as CQRS and Throttling were illustrated, and other patterns, such as Retry and Circuit Breaker, were also discussed. We will keep these patterns as the baseline when we deploy...