Run azd up
to provision your infrastructure and deploy to Azure (or run azd provision
then azd deploy
to accomplish the tasks separately). Visit the service endpoints listed to see your application up-and-running!
To troubleshoot any issues, see troubleshooting.
Configure environment variables for running services by updating settings
in main.parameters.json.
- Create a workflow pipeline file locally. The following starters are available:
- Run
azd pipeline config
to configure the deployment pipeline to connect securely to Azure.
To describe the infrastructure and application, azure.yaml
along with Infrastructure as Code files using Bicep were added with the following directory structure:
- azure.yaml # azd project configuration
- infra/ # Infrastructure as Code (bicep) files
- main.bicep # main deployment module
- app/ # Application resource modules
- shared/ # Shared resource modules
- modules/ # Library modules
Each bicep file declares resources to be provisioned. The resources are provisioned when running azd up
or azd provision
.
- app/app1.bicep - Azure Container Apps resources to host the 'app1' service.
- app/app2.bicep - Azure Container Apps resources to host the 'app2' service.
- app/app3.bicep - Azure Container Apps resources to host the 'app3' service.
- shared/keyvault.bicep - Azure KeyVault to store secrets.
- shared/monitoring.bicep - Azure Log Analytics workspace and Application Insights to log and store instrumentation logs.
- shared/registry.bicep - Azure Container Registry to store docker images.
More information about Bicep language.
If your project does not contain a Dockerfile, we will use Buildpacks using Oryx to create an image for the services in azure.yaml
and get your containerized app onto Azure.
To produce and run the docker image locally:
- Run
azd package
to build the image. - Copy the Image Tag shown.
- Run
docker run -it <Image Tag>
to run the image locally.
Oryx will automatically set PORT
to a default value of 80
(port 8080
for Java). Additionally, it will auto-configure supported web servers such as gunicorn
and ASP .NET Core
to listen to the target PORT
. If your application already listens to the port specified by the PORT
variable, the application will work out-of-the-box. Otherwise, you may need to perform one of the steps below:
- Update your application code or configuration to listen to the port specified by the
PORT
variable - (Alternatively) Search for
targetPort
in a .bicep file under theinfra/app
folder, and update the variable to match the port used by the application.
Visit the Cost Management + Billing page in Azure Portal to track current spend. For more information about how you're billed, and how you can monitor the costs incurred in your Azure subscriptions, visit billing overview.
Q: I visited the service endpoint listed, and I'm seeing a blank page, a generic welcome page, or an error page.
A: Your service may have failed to start, or it may be missing some configuration settings. To investigate further:
- Run
azd show
. Click on the link under "View in Azure Portal" to open the resource group in Azure Portal. - Navigate to the specific Container App service that is failing to deploy.
- Click on the failing revision under "Revisions with Issues".
- Review "Status details" for more information about the type of failure.
- Observe the log outputs from Console log stream and System log stream to identify any errors.
- If logs are written to disk, use Console in the navigation to connect to a shell within the running container.
For more troubleshooting information, visit Container Apps troubleshooting.
For additional information about setting up your azd
project, visit our official docs.