I need to integrate my Logic Apps with a VNet, i've find this article :
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/logic-apps/connect-virtual-network-vnet-isolated-environment#create-environment
But can't find more the ISE on Azure Marketplace, any idea please ?
Regards,
ISE is a preview service enabled on demand and only in specific regions.
Quote from Microsoft: This capability is in private preview. To
request access, create your request to join here.
Note that Integration Service Environment private preview is only
available in Australia East, West Europe, West US 2, East US but will
be in all Logic App regions for public preview.
You can create your ISE via Azure portal and use it. You will have multiple skus to have. Developer or premium.
The developer a cannot be used in production and causes throttling after particular number of actions fired./time unit.
This is a dedicated environment for u with better performance than normal consumption. Still this is expensive.
Alternatively you can use logic apps standard. Vnet integrated veriosn of logic apps.
Related
Can I send traces of steps in my consumption logic app workflow to any application insight? Is there an out of box provision for the same?
While you are linking application insight to your logic app which ever application insight you provide in logic only those traces will be sent to email.
You can go through the Microsoft Document for further information.
As far as I know, there is no out of box connector available to trace logs in Application Insights for Consumption Logic App.
There are two options available
Use Tracked Properties to send custom fields that needs to be tracked to Log Analytics Workspace.
Check this
Invoke Azure Function from Logic App to log into App Insights.
or you can use Standard LA which is recommended for enterprise production scenarios
I plan to develop an app for Amazon Selling Partner API (SP-API). The general idea of the app is that it will be the app, that different sellers can use to help them manage their stock on Amazon. I myself am not a seller on Amazon, and I don't work for a particular seller. The app, once ready, should be available to multiple sellers who are interested in using it.
Unfortunately, from what I found in SP-API documentation here and here it seems it's impossible to register as a developer, without being a seller yourself or having an existing seller that can register you as a developer. Is this correct? If yes, is there any way to overcome this issue? It seems a bit ridiculous that Amazon doesn't provide an easy way for third party developers to develop and test their apps on Amazon.
They would require a Seller Central account to be set up for public applications to allow you to register as a developer. The main account would be used to access the developer registration form and can be used to set up developer access. This would also allow support cases to be raised. Be aware that they will charge a monthly fee. Recent updates to documentation appears to suggest this will only affect Public application developers.
As some background, my company is currently using an Apple Calendar server, some Exchange servers and a Google Apps subscription to provide calendaring for different parts of the organization. I've been tasked with providing free/busy access across these services while we try to take at least one of the services out of the equation.
I've attempted to use Google Interop, but it does not work with Exchange 2013 due to Microsoft eliminating Exchange Public Folder Databases in that release. I've also set up an IIS WebDAV server to attempt to share calendars, but this has shortcomings as well because only one person is able to moderate the calendar, and f/b data can't be queried in the Apple Calendar app - you have to subscribe to a separate f/b calendar.
Are there any suggestions as to how I should proceed?
If you can write your own connectors for each service (ie using propietary API's) you could then expose that information through a custom caldav service.
For example you could use http://milton.io (java) or http://sabre.io/ (php), both allow pulling data from arbitrary data sources.
If i want to rent space on my service which I in turn host on Google App Service, is there some Terms of Service i need to know about?
Also, if I want to provide a service that should be customized for a company, say a Wiki that the company can tailor like their own with skins and even domains. Can that be done? Will I have to provide the binaries to be installed at my customer's Google App accounts? E.g. my wiki application would run at wiki.company.com
I don't believe there is anything in the TOS that prevents you from selling your software as a service on GAE.
The domain issue is a bit trickier at the moment, however, as there are relatively limited tools for attaching large numbers of domain names to a single app instance. Your best bet at the moment would likely be to purchase Google for domains accounts for each customer and host them on these separate accounts.
(cf Issue 113)
Yesterday I got a call from a Microsoft representative asking if we supply "hosted solutions", presumably as part of the big Windows Azure push. As soon as I got off that call, our marketing director came into my office and said the majority of our customers are demanding Active Directory integration in the next version. Then it occurred to me: how does one use Active Directory in a "hosted solution" if the application does not live on the customer's network?
As a more general question about Active Directory integration, what kind of functional changes does that usually imply for an app? Does it mean a user is signed into the app just by authenticating to Active Directory or does it mean the app gets its list of users from Active Directory or does the creation of new users or groups in the app create new users or groups in Active Directory?
Am I just caught in the crossfire of a war of buzzwords?
You're not. Active Directory can be run across the public Internet, though this complicates the security and setup of the network rather considerably.
Generally, authenticating an app against Active Directory means that your membership provider (for example) would call into Active Directory to do the authentication and, after that, the user is simply logged in; you don't keep active credentials, etc, in your own database. However I would consider it smart to cache that information as well, and be prepared to authenticate against that cache in addition to the directory, in case the domain controller is unavailable for authentication (an especially large risk if you're running the directory across the Internet).
You can use Active Directory Federated Services to enable authentication using AD over the internet between two organizations. See: http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc786469.aspx
I've never used it only read about it. Hope it helps.
The accepted answer explains the role of Active Directory and I agree that caching basic user information may be useful in many instances.
Active Directory can be expanded outside of a corporate network, to the internet and connected web services. As another user mentioned, this is achieved through ADFS (Active Directory Federation Services) which allows "trusted" connections to be set up between separate authentication services. There were a number of scenarios explained as part of the "Office 365 Jump Start" webinars:
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/edge/office-365-jump-start-04-microsoft-office-365-identity-and-access-solutions
After viewing these, I immediately thought that a "hosted" AD and ADFS service would be useful, where a customer doesn't want to maintain the AD servers internally (Microsoft don't recommend running less than 5 seperate servers if you're doing this!) Recently, Microsoft have also launched their Azure cloud platform. One of the services they provide is labelled "Identity" which you can see here:
http://www.windowsazure.com/en-us/services/identity/
This is Microsoft's own solution to hosted AD services. In fact, they even mention using their "Identity" hosted service as a solution for SSO (Single Sign-On) for Office 356 and even Google web apps.
I am still learning about AD and Microsoft's cloud offerings, but I hope this points you in the right direction.
There's an article here: http://www.developerfusion.com/article/121561/integrating-active-directory-into-azure/ which describes in-depth how to integrate Active Directory with Azure - hope that helps.
Active Directory can be run across the public internet but you will experience lag times which may cause your app to time out or crash depending on your bandwidth. In the past, I have setup accounts with another company called ultradns.com who specializes in these types of scenarios. hope that helps.
You'd be best off going with a true hosting framework if you would like any support from MS.
I'm sure you'd like some links so:
HMC (Hosted Messaging and Collaboration)
The ONLY true blog I know about on the framework is from Kip Ng
The ASP.NET forums are a good resource for questions on the Framework as well.
An example of the work that goes into configuring AD for Exchange multitenancy is here, though it is based on an older version of the framework a lot of the same principles apply.
Also, try searching on the keyword multitenancy for some articles.