Book Image

Hands-On Cloud Solutions with Azure

By : Greg Leonardo
Book Image

Hands-On Cloud Solutions with Azure

By: Greg Leonardo

Overview of this book

Azure provides cloud-based solutions to support your business demands. Building and running solutions on Azure will help your business maximize the return on investment and minimize the total cost of ownership. Hands-On Cloud Solutions with Azure focuses on addressing the architectural decisions that usually arise when you design or migrate a solution to Microsoft Azure. You will start by designing the building blocks of infrastructure solution on Azure, such as Azure compute, storage, and networking, followed by exploring the database options it offers. You will get to grips with designing scalable web and mobile solutions and understand where to host your Active Directory and Identity Solution. Moving on, you’ll learn how to extend DevOps to Azure. You will also beneft from some exciting services that enable extremely smooth operations and streamlined DevOps between on-premises and cloud. The book will help you to design a secure environment for your solution, on both the Cloud and hybrid. Toward the end, you’ll see how to manage and monitor cloud and hybrid solutions. By the end of this book, you will be armed with all the tools and knowledge you need to properly plan and design your solutions on Azure, whether it’s for a brand new project or migration project.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Quick tips on Azure estimating and cost control


As you begin your journey with Azure, you should work at estimating the resources you intend to use in Azure. This will help keep you on the right track and also help with budgeting for your services. I try to approach this in the following way:

  • Put together the expectations you plan to achieve. This will help keep you on the right path.
  • You need to know the apps you are moving and creating. Understand the dependencies, creating sequence diagrams, and flow between resources. This helps with using the Azure pricing calculator.
  • I like to prototype, which allows me to test and assess my resources.
  • I keep an eye on cost and create alerts when the cost gets close to budgets. You can also put spending limits on subscriptions, but I wouldn't suggest that as once it is hit, your resources will stop working.
  • I recommend using tags on your resources to group and monitor data., which can also be alerted on. I leverage this more when I want to track billing...