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Designing and Implementing Microsoft Azure Networking Solutions

You're reading from   Designing and Implementing Microsoft Azure Networking Solutions Exam Ref AZ-700 preparation guide

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803242033
Length 524 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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David Okeyode David Okeyode
Author Profile Icon David Okeyode
David Okeyode
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Design and Implement Core Networking Infrastructure in Azure FREE CHAPTER
2. Chapter 1: Azure Networking Fundamentals 3. Chapter 2: Designing and Implementing Name Resolution 4. Chapter 3: Design, Implement, and Manage VNet Routing 5. Chapter 4: Design and Implement Cross-VNet Connectivity 6. Part 2: Design, Implement, and Manage Hybrid Networking
7. Chapter 5: Design and Implement Hybrid Network Connectivity with VPN Gateway 8. Chapter 6: Designing and Implementing Hybrid Network Connectivity with the ExpressRoute Gateway 9. Chapter 7: Design and Implement Hybrid Network Connectivity with Virtual WAN 10. Chapter 8: Designing and Implementing Network Security 11. Part 3: Design and Implement Traffic Management and Network Monitoring
12. Chapter 9: Designing and Implementing Application Delivery Services 13. Chapter 10: Designing and Implementing Platform Service Connectivity 14. Chapter 11: Monitoring Networks in Azure 15. Index 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

Hands-on exercise – creating a single-stack VNet in Azure

In this exercise, we will create a single-stack IPv4 network for a fictional organization called CharisTech, which is in the process of migrating some on-premises applications to Azure. We will implement two VNets and subnets to support workloads that will be migrated. Here are the tasks that we will complete in this exercise:

  • Task 1: Creating the CharisTech resource group
  • Task 2: Creating the CoreServicesVNet VNet and subnets
  • Task 3: Verifying the creation of VNets and subnets

Figure 1.15 shows the outcome that we’ll get to at the end of the tasks:

Figure 1.15 – CharisTech Azure VNets and subnets

Figure 1.15 – CharisTech Azure VNets and subnets

Task 1 – creating the CharisTech resource group

A resource group is a logical container for managing related Azure resources. In this task, we will create a resource group called CharisTechRG that will hold the networking resources that we will create in other tasks:

  1. Open a web browser and browse to https://portal.azure.com.
  2. On the left-hand side, click on the portal menu icon, then click on Create a resource:
Figure 1.16 – Create a resource

Figure 1.16 – Create a resource

  1. In the search area, type Resource group and press Enter. Click on the Create button:
Figure 1.17 – Create a resource group

Figure 1.17 – Create a resource group

  1. In the Basics tab, enter the following values:
    • Subscription: Select your Azure subscription (1)
    • Resource group: CharisTechRG (2)
    • Region: East US (3)

Then, select Review + create (4):

Figure 1.18 – Creating a resource group

Figure 1.18 – Creating a resource group

  1. Select Create. It should only take a few seconds to create the resource group.
  2. In the top-right corner of the window, select the notification icon (the bell icon). Then, select Go to resource group to open the newly created resource group:
Figure 1.19 – Opening the newly created resource group

Figure 1.19 – Opening the newly created resource group

Leave this window open for the next task. Now that we have a resource group that we can use as a management container, let us proceed to create the VNets and subnets.

Task 2 – creating the CoreServicesVNet VNet and subnets

The first network that we will create is the CoreServicesVNet VNet (Figure 1.15). The network will be deployed in the East US region. It will be segmented into three subnets that will host the following workloads:

  • Public web services (PublicWebServiceSubnet)
  • Databases (DatabaseSubnet)
  • Shared services that are key to the operations of the business, such as domain controllers (SharedServicesSubnet)

Let’s get started:

  1. In the CharisTechRG window, select + Create. In the search box, enter Virtual Network. Select Virtual Network in the search results:
Figure 1.20 – Creating a resource

Figure 1.20 – Creating a resource

  1. On the Virtual Network page, select Create.
  2. On the Create virtual network window, in the Basics tab, enter the following values:
    • Subscription: Select your Azure subscription
    • Resource group: CharisTechRG
    • Name: CoreServicesVNet
    • Region: East US

Then, click Next: IP Addresses >:

Figure 1.21 – Creating the VNet

Figure 1.21 – Creating the VNet

  1. In the IP Addresses tab, change the default IP address space to 10.10.0.0/16. Then, select + Add subnet:
Figure 1.22 – Setting the IP address

Figure 1.22 – Setting the IP address

  1. In the Add subnet window, configure the following:
    • Subnet name: SharedServicesSubnet
    • Subnet address range: 10.10.1.0/24
    • NAT gateway: None
    • Service endpoint: 0 selected

Then, click Add:

Figure 1.23 – Adding a subnet

Figure 1.23 – Adding a subnet

  1. Click on + Add subnet and repeat Step 5 to add the following subnet configurations:

Subnet

Configuration option

Configuration value

DatabaseSubnet

Subnet name

DatabaseSubnet

Subnet address range

10.10.2.0/24

PublicWebServiceSubnet

Subnet name

PublicWebServiceSubnet

Subnet address range

10.10.3.0/24

Table 1.1 – Subnet configuration details

7. The configuration should look like Figure 1.24. Click on Review + create:

Figure 1.24 – Subnets added to the VNet configuration

Figure 1.24 – Subnets added to the VNet configuration

8. Select Create. It should only take a few seconds to create the VNet and subnets.

Awesome! After the deployment completes, let us review what has been created.

Task 3 – verifying the creation of the VNet and subnets

In this task, we will review the resources created in the last task:

  1. Click on Go to resource to open the newly created VNet:
Figure 1.25 –Microsoft VNet overview

Figure 1.25 –Microsoft VNet overview

  1. In the CoreServicesVNet virtual network blade, in the Settings section, click on Subnets to review the subnets that were created:
Figure 1.26 – Reviewing the subnets

Figure 1.26 – Reviewing the subnets

You can leave this window open for the next task. Now that we have a resource group that we can use as a management container, let us proceed to create the VNets and subnets.

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