Getting Started with Network - Manage Internet Facing Load Balancer - in Java

Azure Network sample for managing Internet facing load balancers -

High-level ...

- Create an Internet facing load balancer that receives network traffic on port 80 & 443 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 health probes

Details ...

Create an Internet facing load balancer with ... - A frontend public IP address - Two backend address pools which contain network interfaces for the virtual machines to receive HTTP and HTTPS network traffic from the load balancer - Two load balancing rules for HTTP and HTTPS to map public ports on the load balancer to ports in the backend address pool - Two probes which contain HTTP and HTTPS health probes 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 frontend subnet ... - And associate network interfaces to backend pools and NAT rules

Create two virtual machines in the frontend subnet ... - And assign network interfaces

Update an existing load balancer, configure TCP idle timeout Create another load balancer Remove an existing load balancer

Running this Sample

To run this sample:

See DefaultAzureCredential and prepare the authentication works best for you. For more details on authentication, please refer to AUTH.md.

git clone https://github.com/Azure-Samples/network-java-manage-internet-facing-load-balancers.git

cd network-java-manage-internet-facing-load-balancers

mvn clean compile exec:java

More information

For general documentation as well as quickstarts on how to use Azure Management Libraries for Java, please see here.

If you find bug in the sample, please create an issue here.

Start to develop applications with Java on Azure here.

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.