We recommend using Azure Native.
Web Server Using Azure Virtual Machine with ComponentResource
This example uses pulumi.ComponentResource
as described here
to create and deploy an Azure Virtual Machine and starts a HTTP server on it.
The use of pulumi.ComponentResource
demonstrates how multiple low-level resources
can be composed into a higher-level, reusable abstraction.
Prerequisites
Deploying and running the program
Create a new stack:
pulumi stack init
Set the Azure environment:
pulumi config set azure:environment public pulumi config set azure:subscriptionId <YOUR_SUBSCRIPTION_ID>
Set the required configuration for this example. This example requires you to supply a username and password to the virtual machine that we are going to create.
pulumi config set username myusername
The password is a secret, so we can ask Pulumi to encrypt the configuration:
pulumi config set --secret password Hunter2hunter2
Run
pulumi up
to preview and deploy the changes:$ pulumi up Previewing update (dev): Type Name Plan + pulumi:pulumi:Stack azure-py-webserver-component-dev create + ├─ custom:app:WebServer server create + │ ├─ azure:network:PublicIp server-ip create + │ ├─ azure:network:NetworkInterface server-nic create + │ └─ azure:compute:VirtualMachine server-vm create + └─ azure:core:ResourceGroup server create + └─ azure:network:VirtualNetwork server-network create + └─ azure:network:Subnet server-subnet create Resources: + 8 to create Do you want to perform this update? yes Updating (dev): Type Name Status + pulumi:pulumi:Stack azure-py-webserver-component-dev created + ├─ custom:app:WebServer server created + │ ├─ azure:network:PublicIp server-ip created + │ ├─ azure:network:NetworkInterface server-nic created + │ └─ azure:compute:VirtualMachine server-vm created + └─ azure:core:ResourceGroup server created + └─ azure:network:VirtualNetwork server-network created + └─ azure:network:Subnet server-subnet created Outputs: public_ip: "13.64.196.146" Resources: + 8 created Duration: 2m9s
Get the IP address of the newly-created instance from the stack’s outputs:
$ pulumi stack output public_ip 13.64.196.146
Check to see that your server is now running:
$ curl http://$(pulumi stack output public_ip) Hello, World!
Destroy the stack:
$ pulumi destroy -y Previewing destroy (dev): Type Name Plan - pulumi:pulumi:Stack azure-py-webserver-component-dev delete - ├─ custom:app:WebServer server delete - │ ├─ azure:compute:VirtualMachine server-vm delete - │ ├─ azure:network:NetworkInterface server-nic delete - │ └─ azure:network:PublicIp server-ip delete - └─ azure:core:ResourceGroup server delete - └─ azure:network:VirtualNetwork server-network delete - └─ azure:network:Subnet server-subnet delete Outputs: - public_ip: "13.64.196.146" Resources: - 8 to delete Destroying (dev): Type Name Status - pulumi:pulumi:Stack azure-py-webserver-component-dev deleted - ├─ custom:app:WebServer server deleted - │ ├─ azure:compute:VirtualMachine server-vm deleted - │ ├─ azure:network:NetworkInterface server-nic deleted - │ └─ azure:network:PublicIp server-ip deleted - └─ azure:core:ResourceGroup server deleted - └─ azure:network:VirtualNetwork server-network deleted - └─ azure:network:Subnet server-subnet deleted Outputs: - public_ip: "13.64.196.146" Resources: - 8 deleted Duration: 4m28s The resources in the stack have been deleted, but the history and configuration associated with the stack are still maintained. If you want to remove the stack completely, run 'pulumi stack rm dev'.