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Microsoft Azure Development Cookbook Second Edition

You're reading from   Microsoft Azure Development Cookbook Second Edition Over 70 advanced recipes for developing scalable services with the Microsoft Azure platform

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781782170327
Length 422 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Toc

Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Developing Cloud Services for Microsoft Azure FREE CHAPTER 2. Deploying Quickly with Azure Websites 3. Getting Storage with Blobs in Azure 4. Going Relational with the Azure SQL Database 5. Going NoSQL with Azure Tables 6. Messaging and Queues with the Storage and Service Bus 7. Managing Azure Resources with the Azure Management Libraries 8. Going In-memory with Azure Cache Index

Uploading blocks to a block blob


The Azure Blob service supports two types of blobs: block blobs optimized for streaming and page blobs optimized for random access. Block blobs are so named because they comprise blocks (identified by block IDs) and can be updated either by replacing the entire blob or by replacing individual blocks. Page blobs can be updated either by replacing the entire blob or by modifying individual pages.

A block blob can be up to 200 GB in size and comprises blocks that can be up to 4 MB; a block blob cannot exceed 50,000 blocks. Block blobs larger than 64 MB must be uploaded in blocks, and then, a list of uploaded blocks must be committed to create the blob. The various upload methods in the CloudBlob class handle this two-phase process automatically. However, there are times when it is worthwhile taking direct control of the block upload and commit process. These include uploading very large blobs, performing parallel uploads of blocks, or updating individual blocks...

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