Azure Networking, User Defined Routes, and Network Virtual Appliances

Travis Roberts December 4, 2022
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Travis Roberts

@ciraltos

About

Welcome! I work in technology, primarily Microsoft Server and Enterprise Applications and Azure. I am always trying to learn new things and pass along information as I can. Please subscribe if you enjoy the content or informative.

Video Description

This video was intended to show User Defined Routes (UDRs) and a few items were added on to demonstrate how they work. It starts with some Azure Networking Basics and then we review a hub and spoke network. From there, A Windows Server with Routing and Remote Access Services (RRAS) is configured as a Network Virtual Appliance (NVA) to route traffic between the spokes in the network. UDRs are configured on the spoke subnets that send inter-spoke traffic to the NVA. After that, we add a firewall into the network and direct internet traffic to the firewall with a default route in the UDR. 00:00 - Start 00:46 - Azure Networking Overview 03:50 - NVA Demo Overview 05:06 - Test Without NVA 07:04 - Configure Windows RRAS Router 10:19 - Configure User Defined Routes 14:37 - View Active Routes on a VM 16:11 - Test Connectivity with the UDR 16:56 - Azure Firewall and Default Routes Overview 17:18 - Add a Default UDR for a Firewall Links Zero to Hero with Azure Virtual Desktop https://www.udemy.com/course/zero-to-hero-with-windows-virtual-desktop/?referralCode=B2FE49E6FCEE7A7EA8D4 Hybrid Identity with Windows AD and Azure AD https://www.udemy.com/course/hybrid-identity-and-azure-active-directory/?referralCode=7F62C4C6FD05C73ACCC3