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Jun 06, 2016 I want to introduce you to Neil Gat – he’s a Program Manager on my team and he’s gotten quite good at is writing multi-VM ARM Templates.We were talking a while back about Azure Resource Manager templates and how you can use our QuickStart Template Gallery as a “hacking ground” to learn about the format and function of templates. We’re missing some companion documentation to guide.
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Esri supports several automation options for ArcGIS Enterprise on Microsoft Azure for efficiency and repeatability. Once you run ArcGIS Enterprise Cloud Builder for Microsoft Azure, you can automate repeated deployments using a generated template in popular deployment tools such as Microsoft Visual Studio and command line interfaces with shell programs (Microsoft PowerShell and Bash). ArcGIS Enterprise on Microsoft Azure can also be integrated with continuous integration and continuous deployment (CI/CD) tools such as Jenkins, Octopus Deploy, and Travis CI.
Advanced users can modify and extend templates to suit their needs and specifications. The resources required to perform automated deployments differ depending on your choice of automation platform.
Generate automation artifacts from Cloud Builder
For each of these automation tools, you must first create a deployment using ArcGIS Enterprise Cloud Builder for Microsoft Azure, and save a file containing the automation artifacts from the builder. On the summary step of the completed deployment, click the Save Automation Artifacts button. On the dialog box, browse to your desired storage location. Provide a name for the .zip file to be generated, select the automation option targets you want, and click generate.
Once ArcGIS Enterprise Cloud Builder for Microsoft Azure has finished generating the artifacts, you can browse to the storage location and extract the .zip file. You can use the artifact files in subsequent automation operations.
The exact automation artifact files generated in the .zip file will depend on the target options you select on the dialog box. The following six files will always be generated regardless of which targets you select:
Two additional artifacts are generated when the Visual Studio option is selected:
One additional artifact is generated when the PowerShell option is selected:
One additional artifact is generated when the CLI option is selected:
Deploy using Microsoft Visual Studio
Before you begin, ensure you have the following:
The deployed resources will be available in the resource group you specified once the deployment is complete.
Deploy using AzurePowerShell for Windows
If you have not already done so, install AzurePowerShell for Windows from the Microsoft website.
Deploy using the Azure command line interface (CLI) on Bash
You can use the Azure CLI to launch deployments of ArcGIS Enterprise on Microsoft Azure from machines running Windows, Linux, or macOS. Install Azure CLI 2.0 from the Microsoft website if you haven't done so already. If the original automation artifacts folder was generated on a Windows machine and you want to run the CLI on a macOS or Linux machine, copy the folder to your desired client computer before beginning.
Deploy using Azure Resource Manager
You can download Microsoft Azure Resource Manager (ARM) from GitHub to deploy ArcGIS Enterprise, stand-alone and federated ArcGIS Server sites, and ArcGIS Pro on Azure instances. You can use these templates to automate deployments without needing to generate files from Cloud Builder.
See Automation solutions for your portal to learn more about automation with ArcGIS Enterprise.
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