servers
51 TopicsAnnouncing General Availability: Windows Server Management enabled by Azure Arc
Windows Server Management enabled by Azure Arc offers customers with Windows Server licenses that have active Software Assurances or Windows Server licenses that are active subscription licenses the following key benefits: Azure Update Manager Azure Change Tracking and Inventory Azure Machine Configuration Windows Admin Center in Azure for Arc Remote Support Network HUD Best Practices Assessment Azure Site Recovery (Configuration Only) Upon attestation, customers receive access to the following at no additional cost beyond associated networking, compute, storage, and log ingestion charges. These same capabilities are also available for customers enrolled in Windows Server 2025 Pay as you Go licensing enabled by Azure Arc. Learn more at Windows Server Management enabled by Azure Arc - Azure Arc | Microsoft Learn or watch Video: Free Azure Services for Non-Azure Windows Servers Covered by SA Powered by Azure Arc! To get started, connect your servers to Azure Arc, attest for these benefits, and deploy management services as you modernize to Azure's AI-enabled set of server management capabilities across your hybrid, multi-cloud, and edge infrastructure!18KViews10likes10CommentsAnnouncing Preview of Run Command on Arc-enabled servers
We are excited to announce the Public Preview of Run Command on Azure Arc-enabled servers. This feature is a game-changer for remotely and securely managing your Azure Arc-enabled servers. You can start using Azure CLI or API for Run Command today, without requiring any additional extensions or configurations, and at no additional cost.6.7KViews9likes0CommentsSimplify certificate management of on-prem IIS server with Azure Arc & Azure Key Vault VM extension
One common question which I’ve come across is certificate management for web servers. Usually when servers are hosted on Azure there are ways like storing certificates and secrets in Azure Key vault is a viable solution. I’ve come across customers who’re running servers in hybrid and few servers would still remain on-premises because of dependencies. For these web servers managing certificates is a costly affair. Common practice which I’ve seen is admin sharing the certificate with application team on some file share. This has few disadvantages. Storing the certificate in file share or on email. Based on the number of application team a lot of team gets access to certificates. Manually applying updated certificates once the expiry is near also finding which all servers this certificate is being used is a pain if you’ve a big environment with lots of web service. One better way to handle this scenario is to Store certificate in Azure Key vault centrally and Arc Enable the web server. One last step which will do the magic is Azure Key vault VM Extension. Which can be enabled on Arc Server as extension. This setup provides the advantages below. All the certificates are stored centrally in Azure Key Vault which is protected. No application team has got manual access to certificates, on-prem server will pull the certificate based on the managed identity assigned via Azure Arc. Once the cert expiry is near Admin/app team need to just goto Azure Key Vault and update the certificate with the latest version. Azure Key vault VM Extension will pull the latest certificate and apply the same to the website. $Settings = @{ secretsManagementSettings = @{ observedCertificates = @( "https://keyvaultname.vault.azure.net/secrets/certificatename" # Add more here in a comma separated list ) certificateStoreLocation = "LocalMachine" certificateStoreName = "My" pollingIntervalInS = "3600" # every hour } authenticationSettings = @{ # Don't change this line, it's required for Arc enabled servers msiEndpoint = "http://localhost:40342/metadata/identity" } } $ResourceGroup = "ARC_SERVER_RG_NAME" $ArcMachineName = "ARC_SERVER_NAME" $Location = "ARC_SERVER_LOCATION (e.g. eastus2)" New-AzConnectedMachineExtension -ResourceGroupName $ResourceGroup -MachineName $ArcMachineName -Name "KeyVaultForWindows" -Location $Location -Publisher "Microsoft.Azure.KeyVault" -ExtensionType "KeyVaultForWindows" -Setting (ConvertTo-Json $Settings) For auto renewal of certificate, we’ll need to enable IIS Rebind. This is how Arc VM Extension looks like when it’s enabled. Assigning permission to Arc server to fetch the certificate from keyvault. You can use access policy on Keyvault as well, it’s supported. Versions of the certificate/new certificate can be uploaded from key vault certificate blade and looks like below. If you’re renewing certificates and wanted to see if certificates are getting pulled down properly or not you can check error logs located here. C:\ProgramData\Guestconfig\extension_logs\Microsoft.Azure.Keyvault.keyvaultforwindows If you’re running Azure VM similar thing can be achieved : https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/virtual-machines/extensions/key-vault-windows Cert Rebind in IIS: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/iis/get-started/whats-new-in-iis-85/certificate-rebind-in-iis85 Visit my Blog: https://www.azuredoctor.com/ Public blogpost: https://www.azuredoctor.com/posts/arc-keyvault/9.4KViews8likes5CommentsAnnouncing HCIBox support for Azure Stack HCI 23H2
Not a day goes by without the Jumpstart team being asked "When is HCIBox 23H2 coming?" You want to get hands-on with Azure Stack HCI 23H2 and the new cloud deployment, lifecycle management capabilities, and out-of-the-box Arc-enabled services. We have heard the demand loud and clear, and the wait is now over!4.9KViews6likes2CommentsAzure Best Practices delivered to machines anywhere with new Azure Arc and Automanage integration.
Tired of manually onboarding and configuring Azure services for your Arc-enabled servers? With Azure Automanage Machine Best Practices, you can point, click, set, and forget to extend Azure security, monitoring, and governance services to servers anywhere.5.9KViews6likes2Comments