Book Image

Hands-On Linux Administration on Azure - Second Edition

By : Kamesh Ganesan, Rithin Skaria, Frederik Vos
Book Image

Hands-On Linux Administration on Azure - Second Edition

By: Kamesh Ganesan, Rithin Skaria, Frederik Vos

Overview of this book

Thanks to its flexibility in delivering scalable cloud solutions, Microsoft Azure is a suitable platform for managing all your workloads. You can use it to implement Linux virtual machines and containers, and to create applications in open source languages with open APIs. This Linux administration book first takes you through the fundamentals of Linux and Azure to prepare you for the more advanced Linux features in later chapters. With the help of real-world examples, you’ll learn how to deploy virtual machines (VMs) in Azure, expand their capabilities, and manage them efficiently. You will manage containers and use them to run applications reliably, and in the concluding chapter, you'll explore troubleshooting techniques using a variety of open source tools. By the end of this book, you'll be proficient in administering Linux on Azure and leveraging the tools required for deployment.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
13
Index

Packer

It's important for a developer, especially if there are many people working on the same application, to have a standardized environment. If you are not using container technology (refer to Chapter 9, Container Virtualization in Azure, and Chapter 10, Working with Azure Kubernetes Service, to find out more about this technology), Vagrant is a great tool that helps developers with this and manages the life cycle of a VM to get things running very quickly in a reproducible way. It provisions the setup based on image offerings or a custom VHD. It's everything you need if you want to develop your application in the cloud.

But if you want more complex environments, building your own images, multi-machine deployments, cross-cloud environments, and so on, it's not completely impossible, but as soon as you try, you will see that Vagrant is not made for those scenarios.

This is where another HashiCorp product comes in handy: Packer. In this section, we're going...