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Hands-On Linux Administration on Azure

Hands-On Linux Administration on Azure

By : Rithin Skaria, Kamesh Ganesan, Frederik Vos
5 (1)
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Hands-On Linux Administration on Azure

Hands-On Linux Administration on Azure

5 (1)
By: Rithin Skaria, Kamesh Ganesan, 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)
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13
Index

Deploying a Linux Virtual Machine

We've covered the Linux distributions available in Azure and the level of support you can get. In the previous section, we set up the initial environment by creating the resource group and storage; now it's time to deploy our first virtual machine.

Your First Virtual Machine

The resource group has been created, a storage account has been created in this resource group, and now you are ready to create your first Linux virtual machine in Azure.

In PowerShell, use the following command:

 New-AzVM -Name "UbuntuVM" -Location westus2 '
  -ResourceGroupName MyResource1 '
  -ImageName UbuntuLTS -Size Standard_B1S

The cmdlet will prompt you to provide a username and password for your virtual machine:

To provide username and password in Powershell for your virtual machine
Figure 2.4: Providing user credentials for your virtual machine

In Bash, you can use the following command:

az vm create --name UbuntuVM --resource-group MyResource2...

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