Managed identities for Azure resources provides Azure services with an automatically managed identity in Azure Active Directory (Azure AD).
This example demostrates using a managed identity with Azure App Service to access Azure KeyVault, Azure Storage, and Azure SQL Database without passwords or secrets.
The application consists of several parts:
- An ASP.NET Application which reads data from a SQL Database and from a file in Blob Storage
- App Service which host the application. The application binaries are placed in Blob Storage, with Blob Url placed as a secret in Azure Key Vault
- App Service has a Managed Identity enabled
- The identify is granted access to the SQL Server, Blob Storage, and Key Vault
- No secret information is placed in App Service configuration: all access rights are derived from Active Directory
To deploy your infrastructure, follow the below steps.
-
Create a new stack:
$ pulumi stack init dev
-
Login to Azure CLI (you will be prompted to do this during deployment if you forget this step):
$ az login
-
Build and publish the ASP.NET Core project:
$ dotnet publish webapp
-
Set an appropriate Azure location like:
$ pulumi config set azure:location westus
-
Run
pulumi up
to preview and deploy changes:$ pulumi up Previewing changes: ... Performing changes: ... info: 15 changes performed: + 15 resources created Update duration: 4m16s
-
Check the deployed website endpoint:
$ pulumi stack output Endpoint https://app129968b8.azurewebsites.net/ $ curl "$(pulumi stack output Endpoint)" Hello 311378b3-16b7-4889-a8d7-2eb77478beba@50f73f6a-e8e3-46b6-969c-bf026712a650! Here is your...
-
From there, feel free to experiment. Simply making edits and running
pulumi up
will incrementally update your stack. -
Once you've finished experimenting, tear down your stack's resources by destroying and removing it:
$ pulumi destroy --yes $ pulumi stack rm --yes