I created a vm on azure which runs a web application. The vm got created with azure arm. This application communicates with other web services and they authenticate the ip of the request. Therefore I need a static IP which won't change. Furthermore I want to set a dns entry to the web server, also I need here the static IP. How can this be achieved on azure?
1 Answer
For Azure Resource Manager you have to create a load balancer, assign a static VIP to the load balancer, create the rules, create the NICs and then bind the rules and NICs together:
https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/documentation/articles/load-balancer-arm-powershell/
Legacy API Instructions The old way but much easier. You have to create a static IP and then assign it to your cloud service where the VM resides.
New-AzureReservedIP –ReservedIPName "MyReservedIP" –Location "AzureRegionName"
New-AzureVM -ServiceName "NewServiceName" -ReservedIPName "MyReservedIP" -Location "AzureRegionName"
Full example here.
Your cloud service will keep the DNS assigned to it until you destroy it. If you want to use your own domain name you have to create a CNAME that points to your Azure URL or an A record that points to the static IP you assigned above with your domain registrar.
The Public IP address you assign in the portal is the PIP and cannot be static. I could not find a way to create a load balancer in the preview portal.
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Many thanks for your reply. Does this also work in the new azure portal or via azure cli in arm mode?– dc10Nov 23, 2015 at 11:28
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I don't think you can do it from the portal, I use Azure PowerShell and it looks like you can do it from Azure CLI using arm but I didn't use CLI yet myself. azure.microsoft.com/en-us/documentation/articles/…– FrancoisNov 23, 2015 at 11:54
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These are instructions for working with the legacy API, not ARM. And Cloud Services don't exist in the ARM world. Nov 23, 2015 at 12:10
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@DavidMakogon that's interesting, can you point to the doc where they connect the legacy api?– dc10Nov 23, 2015 at 12:16