An example illustrating how to use .NET to manage your Azure load balancers

Azure Network sample for managing internal load balancers - High-level ...

  • Create an internal load balancer that receives network traffic on port 1521 (Oracle SQL Node Port) and sends load-balanced traffic to two virtual machines
  • Create NAT rules for SSH and TELNET access to virtual machines behind the load balancer
  • Create a health probe Details ... Create an internal facing load balancer with ...
  • A frontend private IP address
  • One backend address pool which contains network interfaces for the virtual machines to receive 1521 (Oracle SQL Node Port) network traffic from the load balancer
  • One load balancing rule fto map port 1521 on the load balancer to ports in the backend address pool
  • One probe which contains HTTP health probe used to check availability of virtual machines in the backend address pool
  • Two inbound NAT rules which contain rules that map a public port on the load balancer to a port for a specific virtual machine in the backend address pool
    • this provides direct VM connectivity for SSH to port 22 and TELNET to port 23 Create two network interfaces in the backend subnet ...
  • And associate network interfaces to backend pools and NAT rules Create two virtual machines in the backend subnet ...
  • And assign network interfaces Update an existing load balancer, configure TCP idle timeout Create another load balancer List load balancers Remove an existing load balancer.

Running this Sample

To run this sample:

Set the environment variable CLIENT_ID,CLIENT_SECRET,TENANT_ID,SUBSCRIPTION_ID with the full path for an auth file. See how to create an auth file.

git clone https://github.com/Azure-Samples/network-dotnet-manage-internal-load-balancers.git

cd network-dotnet-manage-internal-load-balancers

dotnet build

bin\Debug\net452\ManageInternalLoadBalancer.exe

More information

Azure Management Libraries for C# Azure .Net Developer Center If you don't have a Microsoft Azure subscription you can get a FREE trial account here


This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opencode@microsoft.com with any additional questions or comments.