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Azure Containers Explained

You're reading from  Azure Containers Explained

Product type Book
Published in Mar 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803231051
Pages 278 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Authors (2):
Wesley Haakman Wesley Haakman
Profile icon Wesley Haakman
Richard Hooper Richard Hooper
Profile icon Richard Hooper
View More author details

Table of Contents (22) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1: Understanding Azure Container Technologies
2. Chapter 1: Azure Containers – Pleased to Meet You 3. Chapter 2: Azure App Service – Running a Container Was Never That Difficult 4. Chapter 3: Deploying Containers to Azure Functions 5. Chapter 4: Azure Container Instances for Serverless Containers 6. Chapter 5: Azure Container Apps for Serverless Kubernetes 7. Chapter 6: Azure Kubernetes Service for Kubernetes in the Cloud 8. Part 2: Choosing and Applying the Right Technology
9. Chapter 7: The Single Container Use Case 10. Chapter 8: Deciding the Best Fitting Azure Technologies for Multiple Containers 11. Chapter 9: Container Technologies for Startups 12. Chapter 10: Container Technologies for Small and Medium-Sized Businesses 13. Chapter 11: Container Technologies for Enterprises 14. Part 3: Migrating Between Technologies and Beyond
15. Chapter 12: Migrating Between Container Technologies 16. Chapter 13: Azure Container Instances – I Like the Scalability But I Need More 17. Chapter 14: Beyond Azure Container Apps 18. Chapter 15: Azure Kubernetes Service – The Next Steps 19. Chapter 16: What’s Next – Diving into Future Trends and More 20. Index 21. Other Books You May Enjoy

Deploying containers to Azure Functions

Now that we understand the concepts of Azure Functions, let’s see whether we can get a container up and running. First, we need a Premium or Dedicated plan to host Azure Functions on. That plan needs to run in a resource group. Let’s create that first:

az group create `
--name "rg-functions-containers" `
--location "west europe"

Important note

Just like in the previous chapters, we used Azure Cloud Shell through the Azure portal to execute the Azure CLI commands.

Let’s verify whether the creation of the resource group was successful:

az group show --name "rg-functions-containers"

You should have a similar result as shown in Figure 3.1:

Figure 3.1 – Output of the az group show command

Figure 3.1 – Output of the az group show command

Now that we have the resource group, we can start deploying actual resources. For Azure Functions to work, we need storage. Luckily, Microsoft Azure provides...

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