What is Azure Resource Manager?
Azure Resource Manager is the deployment and management service for Azure. It provides a management layer that enables you to create, update, and delete resources in your Azure account. You use management features, like access control, locks, and tags, to secure and organize your resources after deployment.
To learn about Azure Resource Manager templates (ARM templates), see the ARM template overview. To learn about Bicep, see Bicep overview.
Consistent management layer
When you send a request through any of the Azure APIs, tools, or SDKs, Resource Manager receives the request. It authenticates and authorizes the request before forwarding it to the appropriate Azure service. Because all requests are handled through the same API, you see consistent results and capabilities in all the different tools.
The following image shows the role Azure Resource Manager plays in handling Azure requests.
All capabilities that are available in the portal are also available through PowerShell, Azure CLI, REST APIs, and client SDKs. Functionality initially released through APIs are represented in the portal within 180 days of initial release.
Important
Azure Resource Manager will only support Transport Layer Security (TLS) 1.2 or later by Fall 2023. For more information, see Migrating to TLS 1.2 for Azure Resource Manager.
Terminology
If you're new to Azure Resource Manager, there are some terms you might not be familiar with.
- resource - A manageable item that is available through Azure. Virtual machines, storage accounts, web apps, databases, and virtual networks are examples of resources. Resource groups, subscriptions, management groups, and tags are also examples of resources.
- resource group - A container that holds related resources for an Azure solution. The resource group includes those resources that you want to manage as a group. You decide which resources belong in a resource group based on what makes the most sense for your organization. See What is a resource group?.
- resource provider - A service that supplies Azure resources. For example, a common resource provider is
Microsoft.Compute
, which supplies the virtual machine resource.Microsoft.Storage
is another common resource provider. See Resource providers and types. - declarative syntax - Syntax that lets you state "Here's what I intend to create" without having to write the sequence of programming commands to create it. ARM templates and Bicep files are examples of declarative syntax. In those files, you define the properties for the infrastructure to deploy to Azure.
- ARM template - A JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) file that defines one or more resources to deploy to a resource group, subscription, management group, or tenant. The template can be used to deploy the resources consistently and repeatedly. See Template deployment overview.
- Bicep file - A file for declaratively deploying Azure resources. Bicep is a language that was designed to provide the best authoring experience for infrastructure as code solutions in Azure. See Bicep overview.
- extension resource - A resource that adds to another resource's capabilities. For example, a role assignment is an extension resource. You apply a role assignment to any other resource to specify access. See Extension resources.
For more definitions of Azure terminology, see Azure fundamental concepts.
The benefits of using Resource Manager
With Resource Manager, you can:
Manage your infrastructure through declarative templates rather than scripts.
Deploy, manage, and monitor all the resources for your solution as a group, rather than handling these resources individually.
Redeploy your solution throughout the development lifecycle and have confidence your resources are deployed in a consistent state.
Define the dependencies between resources so they're deployed in the correct order.
Apply access control to all services because Azure role-based access control (Azure RBAC) is natively integrated into the management platform.
Apply tags to resources to logically organize all the resources in your subscription.
Clarify your organization's billing by viewing costs for a group of resources sharing the same tag.
Understand scope
Azure provides four levels of management scope: management groups, subscriptions, resource groups, and resources. The following image shows an example of these layers.
You apply management settings at any of these levels of scope. The level you select determines how widely the setting is applied. Lower levels inherit settings from higher levels. For example, when you apply a policy to the subscription, the policy is applied to all resource groups and resources in your subscription. When you apply a policy on the resource group, that policy is applied to the resource group and all its resources. However, another resource group doesn't have that policy assignment.
For information about managing identities and access, see Microsoft Entra ID.
You can deploy templates to tenants, management groups, subscriptions, or resource groups.
What is a resource group?
A resource group is a container that enables you to manage related resources for an Azure solution. By using the resource group, you can coordinate changes to the related resources. For example, you can deploy an update to the resource group and have confidence that the resources are updated in a coordinated operation. Or, when you're finished with the solution, you can delete the resource group and know that all of the resources are deleted.
There are some important factors to consider when defining your resource group:
All the resources in your resource group should share the same lifecycle. You deploy, update, and delete them together. If one resource, such as a server, needs to exist on a different deployment cycle it should be in another resource group.
Each resource can exist in only one resource group.
You can add or remove a resource to a resource group at any time.
You can move a resource from one resource group to another group. For more information, see Move resources to new resource group or subscription.
The resources in a resource group can be located in different regions than the resource group, but we recommend that you use the same location. See What location should I use for my resource group?
A resource group can be used to scope access control for administrative actions. To manage a resource group, you can assign Azure Policies, Azure roles, or resource locks.
You can apply tags to a resource group. The resources in the resource group don't inherit those tags.
A resource can connect to resources in other resource groups. This scenario is common when the two resources are related but don't share the same lifecycle. For example, you can have a web app that connects to a database in a different resource group.
When you delete a resource group, all resources in the resource group are also deleted. For information about how Azure Resource Manager orchestrates those deletions, see Azure Resource Manager resource group and resource deletion.
You can deploy up to 800 instances of a resource type in each resource group. Some resource types are exempt from the 800 instance limit. For more information, see resource group limits.
Some resources can exist outside of a resource group. These resources are deployed to the subscription, management group, or tenant. Only specific resource types are supported at these scopes.
To create a resource group, you can use the portal, PowerShell, Azure CLI, or an ARM template.
What location should I use for my resource group?
When you create a resource group, you need to provide a location for that resource group.
You may be wondering, "Why does a resource group need a location? And, if the resources can have different locations than the resource group, why does the resource group location matter at all?"
The resource group stores metadata about the resources. When you specify a location for the resource group, you're specifying where that metadata is stored. For compliance reasons, you may need to ensure that your data is stored in a particular region.
To ensure state consistency for the resource group, all control plane operations are routed through the resource group's location. When selecting a resource group location, we recommend that you select a location close to where your control operations originate. Typically, this location is the one closest to your current location. This routing requirement only applies to control plane operations for the resource group. It doesn't affect requests that are sent to your applications.
If a resource group's region is temporarily unavailable, you may not be able to update resources in the resource group because the metadata is unavailable. The resources in other regions still function as expected, but you may not be able to update them. This condition may also apply to global resources like Azure DNS, Azure DNS Private Zones, Azure Traffic Manager, and Azure Front Door. You can view which types have their metadata managed by Azure Resource Manager via the list of types for the Azure Resource Graph resources table.
To reduce the impact of regional outages, we recommend that you locate resources in the same region as the resource group. When the resource group's region is unavailable, Azure Resource Manager is unable to update your resource's metadata and blocks your write calls. By colocating your resource and resource group region, you reduce the risk of region unavailability because your resources and metadata exist in one region instead of multiple regions.
Resiliency of Azure Resource Manager
The Azure Resource Manager service is designed for resiliency and continuous availability. Resource Manager and control plane operations (requests sent to management.chinacloudapi.cn
) in the REST API are:
Distributed across regions. Azure Resource Manager has a separate instance in each region of Azure, meaning that a failure of the Azure Resource Manager instance in one region doesn't affect the availability of Azure Resource Manager or other Azure services in another region. Although Azure Resource Manager is distributed across regions, some services are regional. This distinction means that while the initial handling of the control plane operation is resilient, the request may be susceptible to regional outages when forwarded to the service.
Distributed across Availability Zones (and regions) in locations that have multiple Availability Zones. This distribution ensures that when a region loses one or more zones, Azure Resource Manager can either fail over to another zone or to another region to continue to provide control plane capability for the resources.
Not dependent on a single logical data center.
Never taken down for maintenance activities.
This resiliency applies to services that receive requests through Resource Manager. For example, Key Vault benefits from this resiliency.
Resolve concurrent operations
When two or more operations try to update the same resource at the same time, Azure Resource Manager detects the conflict and permits only one operation to complete successfully. Azure Resource Manager blocks the other operations and returns an error.
Concurrent resource updates can cause unexpected results. This resolution ensures that your updates are deterministic and reliable. You know the status of your resources and avoid any inconsistency or data loss.
Suppose you have two requests (A and B) that try to update the same resource at the same time. If request A finishes before request B, request A succeeds and request B fails. Request B returns the 409 error. After getting that error code, you can get the updated status of the resource and determine if you want to resend request B.
Next steps
To learn about limits that are applied across Azure services, see Azure subscription and service limits, quotas, and constraints.
To learn about moving resources, see Move resources to new resource group or subscription.
To learn about tagging resources, see Use tags to organize your Azure resources.
To learn about locking resources, see Lock resources to prevent unexpected changes.