Use PowerShell to monitor and scale a single database in Azure SQL Database
Applies to: Azure SQL Database
This PowerShell script example monitors the performance metrics of a single database, scales it to a higher compute size, and creates an alert rule on one of the performance metrics.
If you don't have an Azure trail subscription, create a trial subscription before you begin.
Note
This article uses the Azure Az PowerShell module, which is the recommended PowerShell module for interacting with Azure. To get started with the Az PowerShell module, see Install Azure PowerShell. To learn how to migrate to the Az PowerShell module, see Migrate Azure PowerShell from AzureRM to Az.
This tutorial requires Az PowerShell 1.4.0 or later. If you need to upgrade, see Install Azure PowerShell module. You also need to run Connect-AzAccount -EnvironmentName AzureChinaCloud
to create a connection with Azure.
Sample script
# This script requires the following
# - Az.Resources
# - Az.Accounts
# - Az.Monitor
# - Az.Sql
# First, run Connect-AzAccount -Environment AzureChinaCloud
# Set the subscription in which to create these objects. This is displayed on objects in the Azure portal.
$SubscriptionId = ''
# Set the resource group name and location for your server
$resourceGroupName = "myResourceGroup-$(Get-Random)"
$location = "chinaeast2"
# Set an admin login and password for your server
$adminSqlLogin = "SqlAdmin"
$password = (New-Guid).Guid # Generates a randomized GUID password.
# Set server name - the logical server name has to be unique in the system
$serverName = "server-$(Get-Random)"
# The sample database name
$databaseName = "mySampleDatabase"
# The ip address range that you want to allow to access your server via the firewall rule
$startIp = "0.0.0.0"
$endIp = "0.0.0.0"
# Set subscription
Set-AzContext -SubscriptionId $subscriptionId
# Create a new resource group
$resourceGroup = New-AzResourceGroup -Name $resourceGroupName -Location $location
# Create a new server with a system wide unique server name
$server = New-AzSqlServer -ResourceGroupName $resourceGroupName `
-ServerName $serverName `
-Location $location `
-SqlAdministratorCredentials $(New-Object -TypeName System.Management.Automation.PSCredential -ArgumentList $adminSqlLogin, $(ConvertTo-SecureString -String $password -AsPlainText -Force))
# Create a server firewall rule that allows access from the specified IP range
$serverFirewallRule = New-AzSqlServerFirewallRule -ResourceGroupName $resourceGroupName `
-ServerName $serverName `
-FirewallRuleName "AllowedIPs" -StartIpAddress $startIp -EndIpAddress $endIp
# Create a blank database with an S0 performance level
$database = New-AzSqlDatabase -ResourceGroupName $resourceGroupName `
-ServerName $serverName `
-DatabaseName $databaseName `
-RequestedServiceObjectiveName "S0" `
-SampleName "AdventureWorksLT"
# Monitor the DTU consumption on the database in 5 minute intervals
$MonitorParameters = @{
ResourceId = "/subscriptions/$($(Get-AzContext).Subscription.Id)/resourceGroups/$resourceGroupName/providers/Microsoft.Sql/servers/$serverName/databases/$databaseName"
TimeGrain = [TimeSpan]::Parse("00:05:00")
MetricNames = "dtu_consumption_percent"
}
$metric = Get-AzMetric @monitorparameters
$metric.Data
# Scale the database performance to Standard S1
$database = Set-AzSqlDatabase -ResourceGroupName $resourceGroupName `
-ServerName $servername `
-DatabaseName $databasename `
-Edition "Standard" `
-RequestedServiceObjectiveName "S1"
# Set up an Alert rule using Azure Monitor for the database
# Add an Alert that fires when the pool utilization reaches 90%
# Objects needed: An Action Group Receiver (in this case, an email group), an Action Group, Alert Criteria, and finally an Alert Rule.
# Creates an new action group receiver object with a target email address.
$receiver = New-AzActionGroupReceiver `
-Name "my Sample Azure Admins" `
-EmailAddress "azure-admins-group@contoso.com"
# Creates a new or updates an existing action group.
$actionGroup = Set-AzActionGroup `
-Name "mysample-email-the-azure-admins" `
-ShortName "AzAdminsGrp" `
-ResourceGroupName $resourceGroupName `
-Receiver $receiver
# Fetch the created AzActionGroup into an object of type Microsoft.Azure.Management.Monitor.Models.ActivityLogAlertActionGroup
$actionGroupObject = New-AzActionGroup -ActionGroupId $actionGroup.Id
# Create a criteria for the Alert to monitor.
$criteria = New-AzMetricAlertRuleV2Criteria `
-MetricName "dtu_consumption_percent" `
-TimeAggregation Average `
-Operator GreaterThan `
-Threshold 90
# Create the Alert rule.
# Add-AzMetricAlertRuleV2 adds or updates a V2 (non-classic) metric-based alert rule.
Add-AzMetricAlertRuleV2 -Name "mySample_Alert_DTU_consumption_pct" `
-ResourceGroupName $resourceGroupName `
-WindowSize (New-TimeSpan -Minutes 1) `
-Frequency (New-TimeSpan -Minutes 1) `
-TargetResourceId "/subscriptions/$($(Get-AzContext).Subscription.Id)/resourceGroups/$resourceGroupName/providers/Microsoft.Sql/servers/$serverName/databases/$databaseName" `
-Condition $criteria `
-ActionGroup $actionGroupObject `
-Severity 3 #Informational
<#
# Set up an alert rule using Azure Monitor for the database
# Note that Add-AzMetricAlertRule is deprecated. Use Add-AzMetricAlertRuleV2 instead.
Add-AzMetricAlertRule -ResourceGroup $resourceGroupName `
-Name "MySampleAlertRule" `
-Location $location `
-TargetResourceId "/subscriptions/$($(Get-AzContext).Subscription.Id)/resourceGroups/$resourceGroupName/providers/Microsoft.Sql/servers/$serverName/databases/$databaseName" `
-MetricName "dtu_consumption_percent" `
-Operator "GreaterThan" `
-Threshold 90 `
-WindowSize $([TimeSpan]::Parse("00:05:00")) `
-TimeAggregationOperator "Average" `
-Action $(New-AzAlertRuleEmail -SendToServiceOwner)
#>
# Clean up deployment
# Remove-AzResourceGroup -ResourceGroupName $resourceGroupName
Note
For a full list of metrics, see metrics supported.
Tip
Use Get-AzSqlDatabaseActivity to get the status of database operations and use Stop-AzSqlDatabaseActivity to cancel a database update operation.
Clean up deployment
Use the following command to remove the resource group and all resources associated with it.
Remove-AzResourceGroup -ResourceGroupName $resourcegroupname
Script explanation
This script uses the following commands. Each command in the table links to command-specific documentation.
Command | Notes |
---|---|
New-AzResourceGroup | Creates a resource group in which all resources are stored. |
New-AzSqlServer | Creates a server that hosts a single database or elastic pool. |
Get-AzMetric | Shows the size usage information for the database. |
Set-AzSqlDatabase | Updates database properties or moves the database into, out of, or between elastic pools. |
Add-AzMetricAlertRule | (Deprecated) Adds or updates an alert rule to automatically monitor metrics in the future. Applies only to classic metric-based alert rules. |
Add-AzMetricAlertRuleV2 | Adds or updates an alert rule to automatically monitor metrics in the future. Applies only to non-classic metric-based alert rules. |
Remove-AzResourceGroup | Deletes a resource group including all nested resources. |
Next steps
For more information on Azure PowerShell, see Azure PowerShell documentation.
Additional PowerShell script samples can be found in Azure PowerShell scripts.