Book Image

Learn Azure Administration

By : Kamil Mrzygłód
Book Image

Learn Azure Administration

By: Kamil Mrzygłód

Overview of this book

Microsoft Azure is one of the upcoming cloud platforms that provide cost-effective solutions and services to help businesses overcome complex infrastructure-related challenges. This book will help you scale your cloud administration skills with Microsoft Azure. Learn Azure Administration starts with an introduction to the management of Azure subscriptions, and then takes you through Azure resource management. Next, you'll configure and manage virtual networks and find out how to integrate them with a set of Azure services. You'll then handle the identity and security for users with the help of Azure Active Directory, and manage access from a single place using policies and defined roles. As you advance, you'll get to grips with receipts to manage a virtual machine. The next set of chapters will teach you how to solve advanced problems such as DDoS protection, load balancing, and networking for containers. You'll also learn how to set up file servers, along with managing and storing backups. Later, you'll review monitoring solutions and backup plans for a host of services. The last set of chapters will help you to integrate different services with Azure Event Grid, Azure Automation, and Azure Logic Apps, and teach you how to manage Azure DevOps. By the end of this Azure book, you'll be proficient enough to easily administer your Azure-based cloud environment.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
1
Section 1: Understanding the Basics
5
Section 2: Identity and Access Management
9
Section 3: Advanced Topics

Resources

Resources can follow a similar naming convention to resource groups. Let's verify the following samples:

<service>-<location>
<product>-<location>-<environment>-<service>
<company>-<location>-<environment>-<product>-<service>

Depending on your needs, you may require different data to be available. In general, you can implement the following two approaches:

  • Each element has to be as verbose as possible.
  • A child element only has to implement the extra information that is not available for the parent.

Here are examples of those two approaches:

TheCloudTheory-IT-Prod -> TheCloudTheory-SomeProduct-Use-Prod-Rg -> TheCloudTheory-SomeProduct-Use-Prod-AppServicePlan
TheCloudTheory-IT-Prod -> SomeProduct-Use-Prod-Rg -> AppServicePlan

The choice is yours – you have to select an approach that meets your requirements when it comes to administering resources in Azure. 

Enforcing a naming convention...