Azure DDoS Protection Standard

Azure DDoS Protection Standard is a service that enables AI-based protection of your cloud applications. Below is the list of resources of our webinar aired on 19th September 2019.

As a quick reminder, below is the set of network protections in front of your Azure instances. DDoS protection exists in a free tier which is present by default on all resources you publish using a public IP address. In this session we discuss about the addition of the “Standard” edition of the Azure DDos protection.

azuresecurityarchitecture

On demand session

https://info.microsoft.com/AP-AzureINFRA-WBNR-FY20-09Sep-19-AzureDDoSProtectionStandard-SRDEM4832_LP01Registration-ForminBody.html \

Slides

Demo

Additionnal links:

As usual, feel free to send your feedbacks and suggestions!

Arnaud

Azure landing zones using Terraform: Getting started

This article describes the old experience for Azure CAF landing zones on Terraform, please refer to this article for the new updated experience:

https://arnaud-web.azurewebsites.net/2019/11/15/cloud-adoption-framework-landing-zones-with-terraform/

 

Cloud Adoption Framework for Azure has a great set of recommendations to accelerate deployment of Azure for entreprises who seek to consolidate their IT environment in the cloud and innovate on their applications.

CAF introduces landing zones as a concept that describes all the elements that must be in place to deploy a production-grade quality deployment (ie, that includes a minimal set of auditing, controls, policies, etc).

In order to accelerate that, let’s review how to deploy our first landing zone for Azure based on Terraform! We assume that you know Terraform and Azure already, if thats not the case, spend some time on my previous post.

We have published and will keep on updating a repository on GitHub: http://aka.ms/tf-landingzones

Getting started

The fastest way is to use Azure Cloud Shell:

  1. Open https://shell.azure.com
  2. Go to the clouddrive directory: cd clouddrive
  3. Clone the GitHub repo from http://aka.ms/tf-landingzones git clone https://github.com/aztfmod/blueprints.git
  4. Initialize the environment – this will create the fundamentals for the Terraform state, like Storage Account, Azure Key Vault, and the managed identities: ./launchpad.sh
  5. Deploy your first tranquility blueprint: ./launchpad.sh landingzone_vdc_level1 plan
  6. Review the configuration and if you are ok with it, deploy it by running: ./launchpad.sh landingzone_vdc_level1 apply

Below is a quick demo of doing that:

Customization

In order to ease your first contact with the landing zone, we created a sample configuration file proto.landing_zone_vdc_level1.auto.tfvars. As any .auto.tfvars file, it is going to be picked up automatically by Terraform when running. This file automatically configures all variables needed to get started:

  • Retention period for Activity logs, and operations logs.
  • Names of the resource groups to be created.
  • Location of the resources to be deployed.
  • Tags for the resources.
  • Name of log analytics and list of solutions to be deployed.
  • Security center contact details.

You can tune it to match your criteria, we hope the syntax is self explanatory, feel free to provide feedback on it!

Screenshot 2019-09-17 at 3.09.49 PM

Quick tour of the architecture:

Currently the solution is composed of 3 main components:

1. Launchpad.sh

Is a shell script, it initiates the Terraform state locally, uploads it to the Azure storage account, manages the environment variables and communication accross landing zones and other components.

2. Level0_launchpad

Creates a Key Vault, an Azure managed identity a storage account that is used to create store the Terraform state of our environment. It also creates a serie of service principals to be used to access the Terraform state and to integrate with Azure DevOps (in a future release). For full documentation, refer to the readme file.

3. Landingzone_vdc_level1

This vdc level1 landing zones leverages one blueprint (called tranquility) that sets the foundation for everything accounting and operations logs in your Azure subscription:

  • Resource groups
  • Activity Logging
  • Diagnostics Logging
  • Log Analytics
  • Security Center

Each of those features deployments are accomplished by a respective module, which is also on the GitHub, which Terraform download when it needs it (at the plan stage).

A diagram of landingzone_vdc_level1 would look something like that:

Screenshot 2019-09-17 at 3.32.02 PM.png

For full documentation, refer to the readme file.

That’s it for now, it should be enough for you to get started on the Azure Landing Zones using Terraform. Keep in mind there is much more to come on the Landing Zones, we will keep on publishing more and we will have a couple of webinars to go deep dive on the subject!

Happy landing landing zones crafting!

Arnaud Lheureux