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Azure Stack Hub Demystified

Azure Stack Hub Demystified

By : Young
5 (5)
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Azure Stack Hub Demystified

Azure Stack Hub Demystified

5 (5)
By: Young

Overview of this book

Azure Stack Hub is the on-premise offering from Microsoft, which provides Azure Cloud services within a customer's own data center. It provides consistent processes between on-site and the cloud, allowing developers to test locally and deploy to the cloud in exactly the same manner. Azure Stack Hub Demystified provides complete coverage of deploying, configuring, administrating, and running Microsoft Azure Stack Hub efficiently. Firstly, you will learn how to deploy Azure Stack Hub within an organization. As you progress, you'll understand configuration and the different services provided by the platform. The book also focuses on the underlying architecture and connectivity options for the modern data center. Later, you will understand various approaches to DevOps and their implementation, and learn key topics for the AZ-600 exam. By the end of this Azure book, you will have a thorough understanding of Azure Stack Hub and the services that are provided by the platform, along with the confidence and information you need to be able to pass the AZ-600 exam.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
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1
Section 1: Architecture and Deployment
5
Section 2: Identity and Security
9
Section 3: Features
15
Section 4: Monitoring, Licensing, and Billing

Reviewing Azure Stack Hub identity fundamentals

We have already touched on one of the Azure Stack Hub identity fundamentals in Chapter 1, What Is Azure Stack Hub?, and Chapter 2, Azure Stack Architecture, that is, your choice of identity provider. There are two possible options to select from for the identity resource provider. These are AAD or ADFS. This choice needs to be made prior to deployment, and you cannot change an identity provider post-deployment without a complete redeployment of the Azure Stack Hub solution.

The decision around your identity provider is vitally important as the identity provider you choose might limit your options, particularly around the support of multi-tenancy.

Let's take a look at the differences for each provider:

Table 4.1A

Table 4.1B

As discussed earlier in this chapter, the Open ID Connect protocol is used as part of the authorization flow and also the resource owner flow. We utilize the JSON Web Token for use of the Azure portal...

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