Reader small image

You're reading from  Learning Microsoft Azure Storage

Product typeBook
Published inNov 2017
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781785884917
Edition1st Edition
Tools
Right arrow

Terminologies

Due to an overlap of terms and some misperceptions about the ways that Azure Services are delivered, terminology is a sticking point even for people who have been working with the technology for some time. The following table provides accurate but short definitions for terms related to Azure services. These definitions will be expanded upon in detail throughout the book, so don't worry if they are confused at first:

Term

Definition

On-premises

Means that your data center is hosted and managed from within your company.

Off-premises

Means that your data center is hosted and managed in a remote place (for example, hosted and managed outside your company).

Azure VM

The feature of providing VMs to Azure subscribers.

Blade

The window that pops up when you click on one of the Azure services in the Azure portal, such as Virtual machines.

Journey

A set of blades or chain of selections. For instance, when you select Virtual Machines inside the Azure Portal, click on an existing virtual machine and then select its settings.

Resource group

Provides a logical container for Azure resources (to help manage resources that are often used together).

Images

The VMs you've created in Azure and then captured to be used as templates for later use, or the VMs you've imported to Azure.

Disks

Virtual Hard Disks (VHDs) that you attach to the VMs you create in Azure.

Virtual network

Allows VMs and services that are part of the same virtual network to access each other. However, services outside the virtual network have no way of connecting to services hosted within virtual networks unless you decide to do so.

Fault domain

A group of resources that could fail at the same time. For example, they are in the same rack.

Upgrade/update domain

A group of resources that can be updated simultaneously during system upgrades.

Storage container

The place where storage Blobs are stored, it is also used to assign security policies to the Blobs stored inside it.

Network Security Group (NSG)

Determines the protocols, ports, who and what can access Azure VMs remotely.

VM agent /extensions

Software components that extend the VM functionality and simplify various management operations.

Scale set

A set of identical VMs, that auto scale without pre-provisioning the VMs based on metrics such as CPU, memory, and so on.

Availability set

When VMs are placed in an availability set, the VMs are spread over different fault domains and update domains, which ensures that, in the event of a rack failure, not all instances are brought down at the same time. If any updates are applied to a host on which there is one of your VMs and a restart is required, it will not be applied to the other VM within the same availability set.

System Preparation (SysPrep)

A Windows preparation tool that's used when you have captured a VM and want to use it as a template, which ensures that there's no more than one VM with the same properties, which would lead to a conflict between the VMs.

Previous PageNext Page
You have been reading a chapter from
Learning Microsoft Azure Storage
Published in: Nov 2017Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781785884917
Register for a free Packt account to unlock a world of extra content!
A free Packt account unlocks extra newsletters, articles, discounted offers, and much more. Start advancing your knowledge today.
undefined
Unlock this book and the full library FREE for 7 days
Get unlimited access to 7000+ expert-authored eBooks and videos courses covering every tech area you can think of
Renews at £13.99/month. Cancel anytime