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I have been doing some test and realized that when I stop a VM, I get a red warning saying that it still generates charges. But on which basis ?

Furthermore, on some VM I created, the system without any reason starts fooling and reach a 98% CPU during several hours with no way to stop it or to connect with RDP. VM was totally dead and it's only after several hours that the stop command from the control panel succeeded. Hope I will not been charged for this ? Who is able to decide if my VM is OK or fooling like a crazy horse ?

Moreover, is there any software allowing to transfer my VMs from Azure to my local system, and delete them on Azure to stop any charge ? for a simple backup with possibility to restore/restart them later ? Or to run them in my own hyper-V ?

Best regards

CS

2 Answers 2

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Even if your VM is stopped, you still have resources that have been reserved for your VM (think of storage space, memory, CPU, ...) and these can't be 'sold' to anyone else. Deleting the VM will free these resoures and you'll no longer be charged.

Remember that Virtual Machines are still in preview, meaning things can go bad sometimes. And yes you'll be charged for this, but during the preview you get a 33% discount (more info here: https://www.windowsazure.com/en-us/pricing/details/).

The persistent disks of your VMs are stored in a storage account as page blobs. Using tools like Azure Storage Explorer, CloudXplorer, CloudBerry, ... you can download these VHD files and simply mount them in Hyper-V (You'll need to remember that you'll need a license if you want to run the machine on-premises).

Note that, if you simply delete the VM the disks won't be deleted (they will stay in your storage account). In that case you only pay for storage (which is very cheap).

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The price of VM depends on their size and nature (prenium or not). Also you have to pay for the storage, but a 120GB disks is not billed fully, only effectively used space is.

You can use IaaS Managament Studio to easily calculate how much your blob disk cost, and see links to pricing pages of azure.

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