AZ-900T00 Microsoft Azure Fundamentals-04

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AZ-900T0x

Module 04:
Azure pricing and
support
Lesson 01: Learning objectives
Module 4 – Learning objectives
• Understand and describe Microsoft Azure subscriptions and management
groups.
• Recognize ways to plan and manage Azure costs.
• Understand Azure support options.
• Understand and describe features of Azure Service Level Agreements
(SLAs).
• Understand and describe the service lifecycle in Azure.
Lesson 02: Azure subscriptions
Azure subscriptions

 An Azure subscription provides you with authenticated and authorized access


to Azure accounts.
 Subscriptions can provide billing and access control boundaries.
 An account can have one subscription or multiple subscriptions.
Subscription offers
 Free (next slide)
 Pay-as-you-go
 Enterprise Agreement
 Student
 An account can have one
subscription or multiple
subscriptions.
Azure free account

 Provides 12 months of our most popular services, a $200 credit to explore


any Azure service for 30 days, and over 25 services are free.
 At the end of the trial you can upgrade to pay-as-you-go pricing.
Management Groups
 Management groups can include
multiple Azure subscriptions.
 Subscriptions inherit conditions
applied to the management group.
 10,000 management groups can be
supported in a single directory.
 A management group tree can support
up to six levels of depth.
Lesson 03: Planning and managing costs
Purchasing Azure products and services
 Three main customer types on which the available purchasing options for
Azure products and services are contingent are:
 Enterprise: Enterprise customers sign an Enterprise Agreement with
Azure that commits them to spending a negotiated amount on Azure
services, which they typically pay annually.
 Web direct: Web direct customers sign up for Azure through the Azure
website.
 Cloud solution providers (CSPs): Typically are Microsoft partner
companies that a customer hires to build solutions on top of Azure.
Payment and billing for Azure usage occurs through the customer's
CSP.
Factors affecting costs
There are three primary factors affecting costs:
 Resource Type: Costs are resource-specific, so the
usage that a meter tracks and the number of meters
associated with a resource depend on the resource type.
 Services: Azure usage rates and billing periods can
differ between Enterprise, Web Direct, and CSP
customers.
 Location: The Azure infrastructure is globally
distributed, and usage costs might vary between
locations that offer Azure products, services, and
resources.
Zones for Billing Purposes
 Bandwidth refers to data moving in and out of Azure datacenters. Some
inbound data transfers are free, such as data going into Azure datacenters.
For outbound data transfers—such as data going out of Azure datacenters
—pricing is based on Zones.
 Zone 1 - West US, East US, West Europe,
and others.
 Zone 2 - Australia Central, Japan West,
Central India, and others.
 Zone 3. - Brazil South only.
 DE Zone 1- Includes Germany Central and
Germany Northeast.
Pricing calculator
 Provides a detailed estimate of the costs associated with your infrastructure
configuration.
Walkthrough - Use the Azure Pricing Calculator
Use the Azure Pricing Calculator to generate a cost estimate for an Azure
virtual machine and related network resources.
1. Configure the pricing calculator.
2. Review the pricing estimate.
Total cost of ownership calculator
 A tool to estimate cost savings you can realize by migrating to Azure.
 A report compares the costs of on-premises infrastructures with the costs of
using Azure products and services in the cloud.
Walkthrough - Use the Azure TCO Calculator
Use the Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) Calculator to generate cost
comparison report for an on-premises environment.
1. Configure the TCO calculator.
2. Review the results and save a copy.
Minimizing costs
Perform Perform cost analyses. Use the Azure Pricing and TCO calculators.

Monitor Monitor usage with Azure Advisor. Implement recommendations.

Use spending limits. Use via free trial customers and some credit-based
Use Azure subscriptions.

Use Use Azure Reservations and Azure Hybrid Benefit (HUB).

Choose low-cost locations and regions. If possible, use low-cost


Choose locations.

Keep Keep up-to-date with the latest Azure customer and subscription offers.

Apply Apply tags to identify cost owners. Identify usage owners with tags.
Azure Cost Management
 Reporting
 Data enrichment
 Budgets
 Alerting
 Recommendations
Lesson 04: Azure support options
Support plan options
Every Azure subscription includes free access to billing and subscription support, Azure
products and services documentation, online self-help documentation, white papers,
and community support forums.

Basic Developer Standard Professional Direct


Available to all Trial and non- Production
Business-critical
Scope Microsoft Azure production workload
dependence
accounts environments environments

Technical Business hours 24x7 access to 24x7 access to


Support access to Support Support Engineers Support Engineers
Engineers via email via email and phone via email and phone
Alternative support channels

 Microsoft Developer Network (MSDN) Azure Forums

 Stack Overflow

 Server Fault

 Microsoft Azure general feedback

 @AzureSupport
Knowledge Center

A searchable database
that contains support
questions and answers
from a community of
Azure experts,
developers, customers,
and users.
Walkthrough - Open a Support Request
View available support plan options and then practice creating and
monitoring a new support request.
1. View available support plan options and create a new technical support
request.
2. Create a billing support request.
Lesson 05: Azure Service Level Agreements (SLAs)
Service Level Agreements (SLAs)
 SLAs document the specific terms that define Azure performance
standards.
 SLAs define Microsoft’s
commitment to an Azure service
or product.
 Individual SLAs are available for
each Azure product and service.
 SLAs also define what happens if
a service or product fails to meet
the designated availability
commitments.
SLAs for Azure products and services
 Performance targets are expressed as
uptime and connectivity guarantees.
Downtime Downtime
 Performance-targets range from 99.9% SLA
per month per year
(three nines) to 99.99% (four nines). 99.9% 43.2 minutes 8.76 hours
 If a service fails to meet the
99.95 21.6 minutes 4.38 hours
guarantees, a percentage of the
monthly service fees can be credited to 99.99 4.32 minutes
52.56
minutes
you.
Composite SLAs
 If the App Service has a 99.95% SLA, and the Azure SQL Database has a
99.99% SLA, what is the composite SLA for your application?

Composite SLA

.9995 * .9999
= 99.94%

 Notice the composite SLA is lower than the individual SLAs.


 Improve the SLA by creating independent fallback paths.
Application SLAs
 Customers should determine what SLA is needed for their application.
 Know your workload requirements and usage patterns.
 Design for resiliency and availability.
 Establish availability metrics — mean time to recovery (MTTR) and mean
time between failures (MTBF).
 Establish recovery metrics — recovery time objective and recovery point
objective (RPO).
 Implement resiliency strategies.
 Build in availability requirements.
Walkthrough - Calculate a Composite SLA
Determine services SLA uptime percentages and then calculate the
application composite SLA uptime percentage.
1. Determine the SLA uptime percentage values for an application.
2. Calculate the Application Composite SLA percentage uptime.
Lesson 06: Service lifecycle in Azure
Public and private preview features
 Microsoft offer previews of Azure features for evaluation purposes.
 With Azure previews, you can test beta and other pre-release features,
products, services, software, and regions.

 Private Preview is an Azure feature available to certain Azure customers


for evaluation purposes.
 Public Preview is an Azure feature available to all Azure customers for
evaluation purposes.
Accessing preview features

• Preview new functionality


and features for an existing
service.

• Preview new services.


Accessing Azure Portal preview
• Access the Azure Portal (Preview) -
https://preview.portal.azure.com.
• Provide feedback on new features such
as full-screen blades, performance,
navigation, notifications, and
accessibility improvements.
• Check out the Azure Portal feedback
forum.
General Availability
• New features are evaluated and tested.
• Feature bugs go through a lifecycle of
new, active, resolved, and fixed.
• General availability provides
successfully tested features to all Azure
customers.
• Azure blog announcements is a good
source of information.
Monitoring service and feature updates

• Azure updates provides information about the Azure products, services,


and features, and product roadmaps, and availability.
• View details about all Azure updates and their status.
• Browse and search for updates.
• Subscribe to Azure update notifications by RSS.
Walkthrough - Access Azure Preview features
Access and identify Azure preview services and features and view the latest
Azure updates information.
1. Access preview services and features.
2. Review the Azure updates page.
Lesson 07: Module review questions

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