The MSDN page Where is the DirectX SDK? tells you to use the Windows SDK, specifically the Windows 8.0 SDK, Windows 8.1 SDK, or Windows 10 SDK to do DirectX development (which is assumed to be Direct3D 11 or Direct2D/DirectWrite). Direct3D 12 requires the Windows 10 SDK.
If you are using Visual Studio 2013, Visual Studio 2015, or Visual Studio 2017 RC, then you already have the Windows 8.1 SDK and optionally the Windows 10 SDK.
An important detail is that the D3DX library (D3DX9, D3DX10, and D3DX11) is deprecated and only available in the legacy DirectX SDK. That means D3DX11 is not part of the Windows SDK, and you shouldn't use it.
For HLSL, you use D3DCompile directly or the FXC that comes with the Windows SDK. For math, you use DirectXMath that comes with the Windows SDK. If you are using legacy Effects 11, you can use the version from GitHub. I recommend you also take a look at DirectX Tool Kit for DirectX 11 and it's tutorials. For a complete list of replacements for D3DX, see Living without D3DX.
If you really want to continue to use the legacy DirectX SDK components with Visual Studio 2012 or later, you can but you should note the details at the bottom of the MSDN page above. Notably you have to reverse the include/lib path order when you add the legacy DirectX SDK to your project.
For a complete catalog of where the various bits of the old DirectX SDK ended up, see DirectX SDKs of a certain age, DirectX SDK Tools Catalog, DirectX SDK Samples Catalog, as well as the Living without D3DX article above.
The Direct3D 11 Debug Device for Windows 10 is not installed by any Windows SDK or by the legacy DirectX SDK. It is a windows optional feature. See Direct3D SDK Debug Layer Tricks.
The actual "DirectX Runtime" has been part of the operating system since Windows XP Service Pack 2. The legacy DirectX SDK never installs "DirectX" on any modern version of Windows, and only deploys some optional side-by-side stuff. It's not required at all if you using the Windows SDK. See Not So Direct Setup.