We use Azure Resource Manager in all of our environments. For Azure DevOps and Azure deployments, we use ARM templates. We use different tools for the AWS platform.
I have plans to build my own solutions on the cloud in the near future. I thought Azure is a little easy to learn and then provision different services. I have chosen the platform to explore it. I have studied several services. Azure Resource Manager is the one that I chose. In order to be predefined, Azure Resource Manage means, in most banks and financial services, a particular service with a particular configuration, with a particular security, and its governance policies need to be provisioned. You can define templates, and by standardizing those templates, you can start provisioning the service, which will help you conform to the organization's policies and governance, which I like about the Azure Resource Manager.
The use cases include migrating existing infrastructure to Azure, as well as migrating databases, updating cycles, running backups, creating components, providing ADA services, and offering a jump server, among other things.
Data & Analytics Service, Associate Director at ACL Digital
Real User
2021-04-07T17:57:37Z
Apr 7, 2021
Microsoft has a lot of products on the Microsoft Azure website. You can use it for data migration purposes. You have Azure Data Factory, AZCopy, Azure Storage, data lake services, and analytical services. Depending on the kind of migration, you can pick from any of those services. The combination of services also depends on the data, whose data you have, etc. Based on that combination, we create a solution for data integration. In Azure Resource Manager, you can manage services in different projects, in different environments, and with different tenants. It helps us put the hierarchy in place. Based on the hierarchy, people will get the role and everything, and we can centrally control it. If I have applications that require certain services like Azure Services, I can assign them. I have other web applications that require web-related applications, and I can segregate my users. I can segregate my team based on that. I haven't used Resource Management extensively to control access thoroughly. I don't try to code anything here. I'm mostly using the common functionalities and not anything else.
Digital Transformation Architecture, Manager at a tech services company with 1,001-5,000 employees
Real User
2020-12-03T07:55:29Z
Dec 3, 2020
Our primary use case of this solution is to provision cloud resources and resource groups for different kinds of projects as a support environment. We are partners of Azure and I'm a digital transformation architect and manager of digital.
Cloud Business Manager at a tech services company with 201-500 employees
Reseller
2020-10-25T06:18:21Z
Oct 25, 2020
Azure Resource Manager is used for the management functions. It is a part of the dashboard and the management solution. The customers use it to group and manage every kind of resource in Azure. You can see the information through the console and Azure Resource Manager.
The Azure Resource Manager (ARM) is the service used to provision resources in your Azure subscription. It was first announced at Build 2014 when the new Azure portal ( portal.azure.com ) was announced and provides a new set of API's that are used to provision resources.
We use Azure Resource Manager in all of our environments. For Azure DevOps and Azure deployments, we use ARM templates. We use different tools for the AWS platform.
I have plans to build my own solutions on the cloud in the near future. I thought Azure is a little easy to learn and then provision different services. I have chosen the platform to explore it. I have studied several services. Azure Resource Manager is the one that I chose. In order to be predefined, Azure Resource Manage means, in most banks and financial services, a particular service with a particular configuration, with a particular security, and its governance policies need to be provisioned. You can define templates, and by standardizing those templates, you can start provisioning the service, which will help you conform to the organization's policies and governance, which I like about the Azure Resource Manager.
The use cases include migrating existing infrastructure to Azure, as well as migrating databases, updating cycles, running backups, creating components, providing ADA services, and offering a jump server, among other things.
I am a DevOps engineer and I use the solution for the templates.
Microsoft has a lot of products on the Microsoft Azure website. You can use it for data migration purposes. You have Azure Data Factory, AZCopy, Azure Storage, data lake services, and analytical services. Depending on the kind of migration, you can pick from any of those services. The combination of services also depends on the data, whose data you have, etc. Based on that combination, we create a solution for data integration. In Azure Resource Manager, you can manage services in different projects, in different environments, and with different tenants. It helps us put the hierarchy in place. Based on the hierarchy, people will get the role and everything, and we can centrally control it. If I have applications that require certain services like Azure Services, I can assign them. I have other web applications that require web-related applications, and I can segregate my users. I can segregate my team based on that. I haven't used Resource Management extensively to control access thoroughly. I don't try to code anything here. I'm mostly using the common functionalities and not anything else.
Our primary use case of this solution is to provision cloud resources and resource groups for different kinds of projects as a support environment. We are partners of Azure and I'm a digital transformation architect and manager of digital.
Azure Resource Manager is used for the management functions. It is a part of the dashboard and the management solution. The customers use it to group and manage every kind of resource in Azure. You can see the information through the console and Azure Resource Manager.