Microsoft Azure Virtual Network Peering Demo
>> YOUR LINK HERE: ___ http://youtube.com/watch?v=Rqgi8tBlRnI
Virtual Network to vnet peering azure step by step DEMO • You can connect virtual networks to each other with virtual network peering. These virtual networks can be in the same region or different regions (also known as Global VNet peering). Once virtual networks are peered at, resources in both virtual networks are able to communicate with each other, with the same latency and bandwidth as if the resources were in the same virtual network. • Azure Virtual Network (VNet) is the fundamental building block for your private network in Azure. VNet enables many types of Azure resources, such as Azure Virtual Machines (VM), to securely communicate with each other, the internet, and on-premises networks. VNet is similar to a traditional network that you'd operate in your own data center but brings with it additional benefits of Azure's infrastructure such as scale, availability, and isolation. • Why use an Azure Virtual network? • Azure virtual network enables Azure resources to securely communicate with each other, the internet, and on-premises networks. Key scenarios that you can accomplish a virtual network include - communication of Azure resources with the internet, communication between Azure resources, communication with on-premises resources, filtering network traffic, routing network traffic, and integration with Azure services. • Communicate with the internet • All resources in a VNet can communicate outbound to the internet, by default. You can communicate inbound to a resource by assigning a public IP address or a public Load Balancer. You can also use public IP or public Load Balancer to manage your outbound connections • Communicate between Azure resources • Azure resources communicate securely with each other in one of the following ways: • Through a virtual network: You can deploy VMs, and several other types of Azure resources to a virtual network, such as Azure App Service Environments, the Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS), and Azure Virtual Machine Scale Sets • Through a virtual network service endpoint: Extend your virtual network private address space and the identity of your virtual network to Azure service resources, such as Azure Storage accounts and Azure SQL Database, over a direct connection. Service endpoints allow you to secure your critical Azure service resources to only a virtual network. • Through VNet Peering: You can connect virtual networks to each other, enabling resources in either virtual network to communicate with each other, using virtual network peering. The virtual networks you connect can be in the same, or different, Azure regions. • #PaddyMaddy #cloudComputing #azuretutorial #microsoftazuretutorialforbeginners #azureforbeginners #azurebasics #microsoftazuretraining #Az900 #AZ500, #microsoftazurecertification, #AZ303 #300 #104 #paddyMaddy #azuretraining #AZ104
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