Last month today: GCP in January

We kicked off the new year on the Google Cloud Platform (GCP) blog with lots to say about various services across cloud, including developing applications to run on cloud, planning and executing a cloud migration, and what to know about modern cloud security. Here are the most-read posts from January.  Prepare your infrastructure: Security trends and tips for 2019Along with the New Year’s resolutions and planning that January brings, there’s a good reminder here that the work of securing your user data and applications never ends. Google security experts have strong views about the security trends you need to know about in 2019, from the continued importance of two-factor authentication to concepts such as zero-trust. Take a look at all the security trends here.The topic of identity and access management in the cloud covers quite a lot of ground. But from a practical perspective, there are some typical use cases for authentication and identity management that you can use to decide which methods and Google Cloud products will meet your particular needs, whether it’s external users, API calls and more. See details and charts on using different authentication methods.Testing, planning and other cloud prepMigrating your workloads and data into the cloud is a great first step to taking advantage of all of cloud’s benefits. To help get you there, we published a cloud migration checklist from Velostrata that covers the considerations you should take into account when you’re deciding which VMs to move to cloud and when. These considerations might include the production or criticality level of the application, its compliance and regulatory status, and app integrations and dependencies. Check the post out for guidance and tips on migrating to cloud.Traffic navigation app Waze uses the Kayenta feature of the open-source Spinnaker deployment tool to do automated canary analysis, giving them advanced insight into how new app versions might perform in production. But why build your own canary deployment system when you can develop a pipeline that works for you with Spinnaker? Learn more about developing canary configurations, reports and metrics.Creating and honing the building blocks of cloudEnterprise software development becomes more difficult and expensive if businesses continually customize it to meet every user’s needs. That drives up costs. But the enterprise software delivery model could change quickly as concepts like serverless and tools like GCP’s Cloud Spanner database open the door to building “autonomous apps” that comprise multiple microservices. Get the whole story on the future of developing and delivering software.Developers want to write code in the language that is most familiar to them and their company, and for a lot of them, that means Go. As of January, Go 1.11 is a supported language on Cloud Functions, our serverless event-based compute platform. You can read about the key language features that are available in this version. Read the details of Go 1.11 on Cloud Functions.That’s a wrap for January. Stay tuned to the GCP blog for the latest cloud news and tips.
Quelle: Google Cloud Platform

Modernizing payment management for online merchants

E-commerce merchants all over the world are innovating every day to offer customers the best user experience. To keep customers coming back, the buying experience should leave only good impressions, from beginning to end. To achieve this, merchants want to examine every step—especially the payment checkout. So, payment processors need to complement and support the innovations of the merchants. And the final experience needs to be as intuitive and seamless as possible, so it does not break the checkout flow; it should support the brand experience and leave customers with a pleasing memory. Helping a merchant craft a seamless payment experience is the domain of Newgen.

Solution key features

Guru is Newgen's fully integrated portal that enables merchants to have a complete view of their payments, generate reports, capture/void transactions, and perform refunds. It is a fully managed SaaS solution which comes as a value addition with Newgen's Payment Gateway—a cutting edge payment technology for merchants. The solution competes in the market with these key features.

Intelligent transaction routing: Newgen’s engine automatically routes transactions taking into account the country, credit provider, volume and ratio (selecting the best destination based on the transaction amount), currency, and transaction fees. Using machine learning that is continually improving, the engine bases its decisions on platform health, performance, and fees—it will select the optimal route to maximize your gains. The service provides capabilities that would otherwise consume a merchant’s resources to reproduce.
Split payments: When friends and family want to split a charge, Newgen will make it easy for them to do so. The end user provides the email addresses for the participants, and sets the split ratio (for example, “evenly”). The engine generates the email inviting others to participate. The initiator can check the status of the payment progress.
Page builders: Your brand and UI should be distinct, and the payment process needs to be integrated into it. Newgen lets you build a custom UI with a drag-and-drop approach. You can craft the checkout experience to ensure your brand is present and reassuring to your customers.
Flash checkout: Requiring customers to fill in form data should be a one-time event. Newgen gives the customer the option of saving the data for reuse and instant checkout. The data is securely stored, and Newgen strictly adheres to PCI DSS level 1 for maximum security.

Azure services

Guru is a fully cloud-based solution hosted completely on Microsoft Azure. It benefits from Azure’s highly scalable and secure technologies, with the flexibility to develop non-trivial technology stacks. Guru specifically uses these Azure technologies:

Azure Virtual Machines
Azure SQL Database
Azure Files
Azure Site Recovery
Azure Functions

Recommended next steps

Explore Newgen’s various solutions to see what works for you. Or, go to the Azure Marketplace, and click Contact me.
Quelle: Azure

Azure.Source – Volume 68

Now available in preview

Read Replicas for Azure Database for PostgreSQL now in preview

Scale out read-heavy workloads on Azure Database for PostgreSQL with read replicas, which enable continuous, asynchronous replication of data from one Azure Database for PostgreSQL master server to up to five Azure Database for PostgreSQL read replica servers in the same region. Replica servers are read-only except for writes replicated from data changes on the master. Stopping replication to a replica server causes it to become a standalone server that accepts reads and writes. Replicas are new servers that can be managed in similar ways as normal standalone Azure Database for PostgreSQL servers. For each read replica, you are billed for the provisioned compute in vCores and provisioned storage in GB/month.

Scaling out the reporting workload for a BI Reporting workload with read replicas

Now generally available

Announcing the general availability of Lsv2-series Azure Virtual Machines

Power your high throughput and high IOPS workloads including big data applications, SQL and NoSQL databases, data warehousing, and large transactional databases with Lsv2-series Azure Virtual Machines (VMs), which run on the AMD EPYCTM 7551 processor with an all core boost of 2.55GHz. The Lsv2-series VMs offer various configurations from 8 to 80 vCPUs with simultaneous multi-threading. Each VM features 8 GiB of memory and one 1.92TB NVMe SSD M.2 device per 8 vCPUs, with up to 19.2TB (10 x 1.92TB) available on the 80vCPU L80s v2. We are launching the Lsv2-series in the following regions: East US, East US 2, West Europe, and SE Asia. We plan to make these new VMs available in more regions in the coming months including West US 2 in February and North Europe in April.

Announcing the general availability of Query Store for Azure SQL Data Warehouse

Get insight into performance of your Azure SQL Data Warehouse queries using Query Store. The SQL Server Query Store feature provides you with insight on query plan choice and performance. It simplifies performance troubleshooting by helping you quickly find performance differences caused by query plan changes. Query Store automatically captures a history of queries, plans, and runtime statistics, and retains these for your review. It separates data by time windows so you can see database usage patterns and understand when query plan changes happened on the server. Query Store is available in all regions for all generations of SQL Data Warehouse with no additional charges.

Also generally available

General availability: Global VNet Peering in Azure China cloud
General availability: Move MariaDB servers to new resource groups and subscriptions
Azure DNS: Getting ready for DNS Flag Day
Avere vFXT for Azure: New ARM Template Deployment now available
Azure Site Recovery: Azure VM disaster recovery updates
Schedules feature released for Azure Lab Services classroom labs
New release of the Microsoft Threat Modeling Tool

 

News and updates

Microsoft joins the SciKit-learn Consortium

SciKit-learn is a first class, open source machine-learning library in Python that is used by many companies and individuals around the world for scenarios ranging from fraud detection to process optimization. Microsoft joined the SciKit-learn consortium as a platinum sponsor and released tools to enable increased usage of SciKit-learn pipelines. Support is now available for using SciKit-learn in inference scenarios through the high performance, cross platform ONNX Runtime. The SKlearn-ONNX converter exports common SciKit-learn pipelines directly to the ONNX-ML standard format for use on Linux, Windows, or Mac. In addition, support is also available for SciKit-learn training in Azure Machine Learning to automatically generate the best SciKit-learn pipeline according to your training data and problem scenario.

Disaster Recovery support for Linux on VMware

Ensure business continuity by keeping your business apps and workloads running during outages. Azure Site Recovery supports replication of any workload running on a supported machine from a primary site to a secondary location, including all major Linux server versions on VMware. Site Recovery service is updated and improved on an ongoing basis. Over the last six months, we extended support for the latest OS version releases from multiple providers such as Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL), CentOS, Ubuntu, Debian, SUSE, and Oracle.

VMWare to Azure replication architecture

Azure Site Recovery: Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS) for Azure, by Azure

Orchestrate and manages disaster recovery for your Azure VMs with Azure Site Recovery. Azure provides native high availability and reliability for your mission-critical workloads running on IaaS virtual machines (VMs). Improve your protection and meet compliance requirements using the disaster recovery provided by Azure Site Recovery. Check out this post to get a recap of all the new capabilities from the last few months, including support zone-pinned Azure VMs and disaster recovery of Azure Disk Encryption-enabled VMs.

Adventure awaits: Azure Trivia is back!

If you loved playing #AzureTrivia on Twitter last year, it’s back! This year's #AzureTrivia celebrates your love of problem solving, growth, and adventure. Players will be taken on an exciting, mystical journey where you’ll not only pick up new skills, but test your technical prowess in order to unlock new lands and win some sweet, sweet swag. Check out @Azure on Twitter every Monday for a new Azure-related question to tackle. See this post for more details, including a handy FAQ and a link to the official rules.

Play #AzureTrivia – follow @Azure on Twitter

Additional updates

Extend alerts created in the Azure Government cloud's OMS portal to Azure
What's new in Azure Log Analytics – January 2019 
In Development: AKS Pod Identity, AKS cluster auto-upgrade, Node auto-repair support for AKS, AKS private cluster, Availability Zones (AZ) support for AKS, Multiple node pools for your AKS workloads, Authorized IP Ranges for Kubernetes API server, AKS pod security policy, AKS cluster autoscaling, AKS control plane audit Logs, and AKS Network Policy

Tech content

Development, source control, and CI/CD for Azure Stream Analytics jobs

Stream Analytics Visual Studio tools together with Azure Pipelines provide an integrated environment that helps you develop and source control your Azure Stream Analytics jobs and set up automated processes to build, test, and deploy these jobs to multiple environments. In this post, Jie Su covers the end-to-end development and CI/CD process using Stream Analytics Visual Studio tools, Stream Analytics CI/CD NuGet package, and Azure Pipelines.

Azure Security Center can detect emerging vulnerabilities in Linux

Recently a flaw was discovered in PolKit – a component that controls system-wide privileges in Unix OS. This vulnerability potentially allows unprivileged account to have root permission. In this blog post, learn about this vulnerability and how an attacker can easily abuse and weaponize it. In addition, learn how Azure Security Center can help you detect threats, and provide recommendations for mitigation steps.

An example security alert in Azure Security Center

QnA Maker simplifies knowledge base management for your Q&A bot

QnA Maker is an easy-to-use web-based service that makes it easy to power a question-answer application or chatbot from semi-structured content like FAQ documents and product manuals. With QnA Maker, developers can build, train, and publish question and answer bots in minutes. Active Learning in QnA Maker helps identify and recommend question variations for any question and allows you to add them to your knowledge base. Your knowledge base content won’t change unless you choose to add or edit the suggestions to the knowledge base.

Configuring Global Multi-region Reads and Writes for Mongo DB with Azure Cosmos DB

Jay Gordon shows you how quickly you can configure your data's consistency level and replication across the Azure Cloud.

 

Using PowerShell to Import and Export Azure Blueprints

In the second part of a series on Azure Blueprints, Sonia Cuff writes about a new command in the PowerShell Gallery to import and export Azure Blueprints and their artifacts (JSON and Infra as code). The post also describes use cases (multi-subscription, promote test to production, multi-tenancy/multi-org) and command syntax, and drives to official resources.

Build Pipelines for GitHub Projects

If you have a project on GitHub, chances are you will want to continually build it to ensure it's still compiling, that it's still working with all tests passing, and possibly create a release of the project that allows you and others to simply use the latest version, without having to manually compile/package it. For all that, you need a build pipeline. In this post, you'll learn how to use Azure Pipelines' GitHub integration for more complicated builds and projects, including installing from the GitHub marketplace, finding your repo, and starting to define your first build.

Azure shows

Episode 264 – OnMSFT.com migrating to Azure | The Azure Podcast

The team talks to Kip Kniskern, managing editor of OnMSFT.com about his impressions of Azure after he finished migrating OnMSFT.com to Azure.

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Azure is the new mainframe | Azure Friday

Steve Steuart from Astadia joins Scott Hanselman to show how a mainframe reference architecture based on Azure enables you to deploy your mainframe assets to a native Azure environment. You can the leverage all the available Azure services with your new mainframe in the cloud, including AI, Power BI, IoT, and Machine Learning.

A Closer Look at Intelligent Retail | AI Show

Get ideas about how to build engaging conversational applications using this fun retail example that leverages services from across Microsoft.

Five Things About JavaScript in DevOps | Five Things

What does Azure DevOps have to do with generators, Captain Kirk, and ponies? Where can you get therapy for your VB 6 scars? Why don't Angular, React, and Vue developers have a cool logo like docker? How can you automate your development pipeline using whatever tools you want with Azure DevOps? We turn to the triple amazing Donovan Brown to lay this all out.

What’s new with Windows IoT in 2019 | Internet of Things Show

Find out what Microsoft Windows IoT has planned for 2019! Get an early look into how Windows IoT can help you quickly build safe, smart devices that can be the foundation of your IoT solutions.

How to create a virtual machine in Azure | Azure Portal Series

Azure provides multiple virtual machine configuration options for you to set up your virtual machine exactly how you want for whatever you're trying to do. In this video of the Azure Portal “How To” Series, learn how to configure a basic virtual machine and connect to it in minutes in the Azure portal.

How to push a container image to a Docker Repo | Azure Tips and Tricks

In this edition of Azure Tips and Tricks, learn how to push a container image to a Docker Repo. Once you've signed up for a Docker account, you can easily come to the Docker Hub and push your containers to your registry.

Overview of Azure Database for MySQL in Azure Government | Azure Government

In this episode of the Azure Government video series, Steve Michelotti talks with Sachin Dubey, of the Azure Government Engineering team, about Azure Database for MySQL in Azure Government. MySQL is one of the most popular open source relational databases ever, but running it at an Enterprise scale has its challenges just like any other database. Now with a fully managed PaaS offering, Azure Database for MySQL provides the perfect unification of the underlying MySQL database, which developers know and love with the world-class security, scalability, and reliability of Azure. Sachin also discusses the benefits of Azure Database for MySQL and demonstrates how easy it is to get up and running with Azure Database for MySQL in Azure Government.

Reviewing Current Azure DevOps News, Tips, and Strategies – Episode 2 | The Azure DevOps Podcast

In this week's episode, Jeffrey Palermo reviews some of the current industry news and tips, including; an interesting announcement in the A.I. space about Cortana, ServiceNow Change Management in Azure Pipelines, Azure DevOps Agents on Azure Container Instances (ACI), .NET Core 3 and 4.8, and an article about Razor Components. He also gives his 10 tips for rapidly recovering when a deployment breaks badly.

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Events

The Things Network and Azure IoT connect LoRaWAN devices

Last week at The Things Conference in Amsterdam, Microsoft and The Things Network Foundation collaborated with 2,000 LoRaWAN developers, innovators, and integrators on connecting devices to Azure IoT Central using the open source project Azure IoT Central Device Bridge. If you are planning to or already developing LoRaWAN solutions, join the project today and contribute your code, comments, and suggestions.

IoT Central dashboard

Make healthcare more intelligent by putting IoT into action

Intelligent healthcare, including IoT technology, is a key way to address these critical challenges. Intelligent, connected solutions are lowering costs, increasing patient care and health, and improving clinician and patient satisfaction. If you’re planning to attend HIMSS, you’ll definitely want to register for IoT in Action in Orlando on February 11, 2019, where you’ll discover how IoT and intelligent solutions are transforming the healthcare industry. IoT in Action is a fantastic opportunity to share ideas and build connections in the rich Microsoft customer and partner ecosystem.

Customers, partners, and industries

Azure Marketplace new offers – Volume 30

The Azure Marketplace is the premier destination for all your software needs – certified and optimized to run on Azure. Find, try, purchase, and provision applications & services from hundreds of leading software providers. You can also connect with Gold and Silver Microsoft Cloud Competency partners to help your adoption of Azure. In the second half of December, we published 46 new offers.

Ansible solution now available in the Azure Marketplace

Get the Ansible solution template from the Azure Marketplace, which you can use to configure an Ansible instance following best practices with minimal Azure knowledge. With a handful of user inputs and a simple single-click deployment through the Azure portal, you can provision a fully configured Ansible instance in minutes, which can use Azure services anywhere across the globe. This solution template will install Ansible on a Linux VM based on CentOS 7.5 along with tools configured to work with Azure.

Transitioning big data workloads to the cloud: Best practices from Unravel Data

In this first of a five-part series, Shivnath Babu, CTO and Co-Founder at Unravel Data discusses key considerations in planning for migrations. Unravel Data is an AI-driven Application Performance Management (APM) solution for managing and optimizing big data workloads. Unravel Data provides a unified, full-stack view of apps, resources, data, and users, enabling users to baseline and manage app performance and reliability, control costs and SLAs proactively, and apply automation to minimize support overhead. Upcoming posts will outline the best practices for the migration, operation, and optimization phases of the cloud adoption lifecycle for big data.

A Cloud Guru – Azure This Week – 1 February 2019 | A Cloud Guru – Azure This Week

This time on Azure This Week: Lars talks about Azure Security Center making it easier being compliant with regulatory constraints, OpenAPI Specification v3 support in Azure API Management now in preview, and the team from A Cloud Guru will be at The Ignite Tour in Sydney.

Quelle: Azure

Advancing tactical edge scenarios with Dell EMC Tactical Microsoft Azure Stack and Azure Data Box family

Today, Microsoft is announcing new intelligent cloud and intelligent edge capabilities for U.S. government customers. These new capabilities will help government customers uniquely address “the tactical edge”—or, a dependence on information systems and connectivity in harsh scenarios or other situations where users have critical data availability, integrity, and transparency needs.

As U.S. government agencies support missions around the world, in remote locations, and beyond the reach of standard infrastructure, new technology is required for mission success. Microsoft offers a comprehensive portfolio designed to bring data analysis and insight to the tactical edge. Azure Stack and our Data Box family of products help government agencies with remote operations access the information they need to make decisions at the edge, along with access to the full range of cloud data analytics as connectivity allows.

Just last year we announced the integration of Azure Stack with Azure Government cloud, which unlocks a wide range of hybrid cloud use cases for government customers. By connecting the tactical edge to Azure Government, the mission-critical cloud for U.S. government customers and their partners, federal, state, and local government agencies can now operate with full regulatory compliance and the most up-to-date edge capabilities.

To that end, today, Microsoft, working with partners like Dell EMC, is sharing new capabilities that continue to deliver the power of the intelligent cloud and intelligent edge to government customers and their partners:

Dell EMC Tactical Microsoft Azure Stack in partnership with Tracewell Systems brings Azure-consistent cloud to operating environments where network connectivity is an issue or mobility and high portability are required, i.e. in remote and rugged circumstances. To learn more, please check out Dell EMC’s announcement.

Azure Data Box family for Azure Government –

Azure Data Box Edge, an on-premises appliance with AI-enabled edge compute capabilities, is now available in preview in Azure Government. Azure Data Box Gateway, a virtual storage appliance, will be available in Azure Government in March 2019.

​Azure Data Box will be available in Azure Government in March 2019. Azure Data Box Disk and Azure Data Box Heavy will be available in Azure Government in mid-2019. Together, they provide a spectrum of options to move data to Azure Government in secure and simple way.

From supporting military and humanitarian missions to the needs of the U.S. State Department or other U.S government organizations, these new systems offer unprecedented opportunities to expedite decision making and bring the power of cloud to areas far beyond the reach of a traditional datacenter.

Enabling the tactical edge

As we have shared, in field operations, speed is of the essence and insights empower decisions. In certain situations, a connection can be a security liability or might not even be available. With Azure Stack, agencies can bring core and advanced cloud services to the edge — right to where they’re needed, making it possible to process data in the field without worrying about latency or even Internet connectivity.

See how Azure Stack brings intelligence and cloud services to remote sites here.

Being able to gather, discern, and distribute mission data is essential for making critical decisions. Tools that help process and transfer data directly at the edge make this possible. For example, Data Box Edge, with its in-built hardware acceleration for ML inferencing and light footprint, is useful to further the intelligence of forward-operating units or similar mission needs with AI solutions designed for the tactical edge. Data transfer from the field, which is complex and slow, is made seamless with the Data Box family of products.

This unites the best of edge and cloud computing to unlock never-before-possible capabilities like synthetic mapping and tracking water or air quality. From submarines to aircraft to remote bases, Azure Stack and Azure Data Box allow for the harnessing of the power of cloud at the edge.

Accelerating IT modernization

By merging the best of commercial innovation and investment with a secure, compliant, truly hybrid cloud platform, agencies can now up-level their infrastructures at a scale, pace, and speed that meets their unique needs.

Last year, we announced Azure Stack availability for Azure Government customers. With Azure Stack for Azure Government, agencies can efficiently modernize their on-premises legacy applications that are not ready or a fit for the public cloud due to cyber defense concerns, regulations, or other requirements. These applications can be moved without making any change in code, DevOps tools, processes, or people skills. Solutions like blockchain on Azure Stack enhances transparency and ensure data privacy for various government use cases.

Data Box products help agencies to migrate large amounts of data, for example backup, archive or big data analytics, to Azure when they are limited by time, network availability, or costs.

Finally, I’d like to share an example of our customer solving a real world challenge using intelligent cloud and intelligent edge solution with Azure.

You can get started with Azure Stack by contacting our solution partners for more details on how to order integrated systems. Or, learn more about Azure Stack by downloading an Azure Stack Development Kit – a single-server deployment designed for trial and proof of concepts.

Get started with Azure Data Box Edge preview in Azure Gov by signing up. You can learn more about Data Box family of products at http://azure.com/DataBox.

Learn more about how the new paradigm of intelligent cloud and intelligent edge helps unlock new mission scenarios for government agencies by reading the blog post, “Enabling intelligent cloud and intelligent edge solutions for government.”
Quelle: Azure