This article is part of #ServerlessSeptember. You'll find other helpful articles, detailed tutorials, and videos in this all-things-Serverless content collection. New articles are published every day — that's right, every day — from community members and cloud advocates in the month of September.
Find out more about how Microsoft Azure enables your Serverless functions at https://docs.microsoft.com/azure/azure-functions/.
The previous episodes in this series reviewed how to migrate an existing AWS Lambda JavaScript Node.js function to Azure Functions. This episode takes a step back to review general concepts.
Fundamentals of Azure Serverless
This episode reviews several concepts, including:
- Organize related assets using resource groups
- Manage infrastructure using Azure Resource Management (ARM) templates and the single-click deploy to Azure capability
- Customize your at-a-glance experience using Azure dashboards
- Drill into configuration settings for resources
- Explore data with the web-based storage explorer
Watch the episode here:
You can view the source code for the sample app and deploy the migrated code directly to Azure with a single-click in the “AWSMigration” GitHub repository.
JeremyLikness / AWSMigration
Migrate from AWS Lambda to Azure Functions
Move AWS Lambda to Azure Functions
This is the source code for the "Moving from Lambda to Azure Functions" video series that demonstrates how to migrate from AWS Lambda to Azure Functions.
🎦 Watch the video series (YouTube playlist)
Quick Start
Get your Free Azure Account
You can get started quickly with the migrated function. Simply click or tap the "Deploy to Azure" button. Be sure to enter a unique prefix (for example, use your initials or add a sequence). After the deployment is done, you can access and test the function.
To enable the cache, navigate to the storage account after it is created. Click on
Tables
underTable service
then add a table namedprimes
.
The Code
This repository contains code for all related projects.
Source ("Pure") Function
The function itself determines whether a number passed is prime or not. The pure function is available in src\isItAPrime.js
…
In the next article, we'll look at how to develop and test Azure Functions on your local machine before deploying to Azure.
Top comments (4)
Hi Jeremy, When it say create free Azure account, does it really provide free account? And could account be created from any region?
"free Azure account" means the account creation is free, but the usage is billed 😁
You shouldn't care about the pricing as long as you use their free-tier, and not exceeding that... if your goal is landing an Azure related job, in the end, you will work for a company which will those bills.
Means I should only care about getting job in a company already using Azure and paying all bills. :D
LOL
Yes, it is truly free. 12 months of free services.
"As long as you are within the limits, you can create services for free in any region where services are available."
You can read about what's "in the box" here: Create free services in Azure