Tasks for this Video :
Task 1: Use a template to deploy the lab environment.
Task 2: Deploy an Azure firewall.
Task 3: Create a default route.
Task 4: Configure an application rule.
Task 5: Configure a network rule.
Task 6: Configure DNS servers.
Task 7: Test the firewall.
Playlists:
AZ104(Microsoft Azure Administrator) playlist: • How to Create and Configure Azure AD ...
AZ500(Microsoft Azure Security Technologies) playlist:
• What is Azure policy?||Azure Policy v...
AZ700(Designing and Implementing Microsoft Azure Networking Solutions) playlist:
• Design and implement a Virtual Networ...
AZ900(Microsoft Azure Fundamentals) playlist:
• How to Create Virtual Machine in Azur...
Machine learning playlist
• Linear Regression Machine Learning (p...
Azure Firewall is a cloud-native and intelligent network firewall security service that provides the best of breed threat protection for your cloud workloads running in Azure. It's a fully stateful, firewall as a service with built-in high availability and unrestricted cloud scalability. It provides both east-west and north-south traffic inspection.
Azure Firewall Standard provides L3-L7 filtering and threat intelligence feeds directly from Microsoft Cyber Security. Threat intelligence-based filtering can alert and deny traffic from/to known malicious IP addresses and domains which are updated in real time to protect against new and emerging attacks.
Azure Firewall Premium provides advanced capabilities include signature-based IDPS to allow rapid detection of attacks by looking for specific patterns. These patterns can include byte sequences in network traffic, or known malicious instruction sequences used by malware. There are more than 58,000 signatures in over 50 categories which are updated in real time to protect against new and emerging exploits. The exploit categories include malware, phishing, coin mining, and Trojan attacks.
Azure automatically creates system routes and assigns the routes to each subnet in a virtual network. You can't create system routes, nor can you remove system routes, but you can override some system routes with custom routes. Azure creates default system routes for each subnet, and adds more optional default routes to specific subnets, or every subnet, when you use specific Azure capabilities
You can create custom, or user-defined(static), routes in Azure to override Azure's default system routes, or to add more routes to a subnet's route table. In Azure, you create a route table, then associate the route table to zero or more virtual network subnets. Each subnet can have zero or one route table associated to it. To learn about the maximum number of routes you can add to a route table and the maximum number of user-defined route tables you can create per Azure subscription, see Azure limits. When you create a route table and associate it to a subnet, the table's routes are combined with the subnet's default routes. If there are conflicting route assignments, user-defined routes will override the default routes.
Azure Resource Manager is the deployment and management service for Azure. It provides a management layer that enables you to create, update, and delete resources in your Azure account. You use management features, like access control, locks, and tags, to secure and organize your resources after deployment.
Description reference:
https://docs.microsoft.com/
useful links:
https://docs.microsoft.com/
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You can also learn from Microsoft labs in Github.
This video is created for educational purposes (AZ700 course).
Here is the link to practice labs:
https://github.com/MicrosoftLearning/... #ravitejamureboina
Watch video How to Implement Firewall in Azure?|| How to Deploy Custom Templates?||Implement Routes||Azure online without registration, duration hours minute second in high quality. This video was added by user RaviTeja Mureboina 28 May 2022, don't forget to share it with your friends and acquaintances, it has been viewed on our site 1,140 once and liked it 7 people.