[Update: Oct 12, 2022] We’re excited to announce that the preview of Azure Deployment Environments is now available to the public. Azure Deployment Environments is a managed service that enables dev teams to quickly spin up app infrastructure with project-based templates to establish consistency and best practices while maximizing security, compliance, and cost-efficiency. Sign in to the Azure portal and search for “Deployment Environments” to begin creating environments for your organization.
To learn more about Deployment Environments and getting started with the service, visit the Azure Deployment Environments page or find out how to create your own environment from a template.
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Over the last several years, DevOps has fundamentally changed the way we develop software. New processes and tools have empowered developers to do more in less time, all while working towards increasingly complex applications. Yet for many organizations, providing developers with the complex infrastructure needed to deploy, test, and run their apps remains a challenge due to the difficulty of balancing agility with security and compliance.
Today, we are excited to announce Azure Deployment Environments, a new cloud service that empowers development teams to quickly spin up their app infrastructure with self-service of project-based infrastructure-as-code templates that minimize set-up time while maximizing security, compliance, and cost efficiency.
You can sign up for the waiting list to evaluate the private preview at https://aka.ms/environments-signup and to see demos of the service watch the Build session, Delivering developer velocity through the entire engineering system.
Figure 1: Azure Deployment Environments overview.
With Deployment Environments, developers can set up and create environments with self-serviced infrastructure-as-code templates that deploy in minutes. Devs pick from a catalog of curated templates, maintained by their team, and deploy them directly from where they live - local CLI or custom developer portal. These templates allow developers to focus on coding and testing their application instead of dealing with the intricacies of provisioning the environment.
Figure 2: Create environments from catalog of curated templates.
Developers can set up environments to provision as part of their automated CI/CD deployment pipelines. They can create a new dev environment with each feature branch to ensure that they see their changes in a prod-like environment and use dev environments when creating PR’s for higher quality code reviews. Leverage environment specific templates that provision into separate subscriptions to test changes before they merge into production. Configure environments to auto-expire so that the resources are deleted once an environment is no longer needed. Template environments let developers code with confidence by bringing them closer to production.
Figure 3: Set auto-expiry of environments.
Environments provisioned from the “catalog” of templates are already built around standardized enterprise configurations and governance, eliminating any compliance worry. Templates are built as ARM (and eventually Terraform and Bicep) files and kept in source control repositories with versioning, access control, and pull request processes, making it easy for developers to collaborate across teams.
Azure Deployment Environments provide developers flexibility while keeping compliance, security, and cost control in the hands of IT. Dev infra admins and IT organizations manage a catalog of standard templates that ensure consistency across your enterprise. Templates ensure environments conform to the architecture, policies, and best practices they establish for apps across the organization.
Azure Deployment Environments allows you to set up a managed identity to provision resources on behalf of authorized developers in a project. Developers get the necessary permissions to create and destroy their own environments without providing broad contributor access to create resources outside the environment. Establish comprehensive access controls to your environments by project and user type with Azure RBAC and Azure AD security authentication.
Figure 4: Set Azure mappings for a project.
IT and dev infra admins can use environment types to give more flexible controls for developers in sandbox environments while maintaining greater control and security over production environments. Use separate environment templates for dev, test, staging, and production to manage costs in dev environments while scaling up resources in production environments. Each environment type is mapped to its subscription so you can isolate environments and track costs across your organization.
At the end of the day, you can also spin down idle environments with custom schedules to reduce the cost of unused resources.
Azure Deployment Environments is currently in private preview and will be in public preview in the next few months. Sign up to get on the list to evaluate Azure Deployment Environments at https://aka.ms/environments-signup.
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