Configure Azure Blob Storage
Understand the purpose and benefits of Azure Blob Storage
Create and configure Azure Blob storage accounts
Manage containers and blob within azure blob storage
optimize blob storage performance and scalability
implement lifecycle management policies to automate data movement and deletion
Determine the best pricing plans for your azure blob storage
Azure Blob storage is a service for storing large amounts of unstructured object data.
Blob - Binary Large Object Blob Storage is also referred to as object storage or container storage
Blob storage can store any type of text or binary data.
Blob storage uses three resources to store and manage your data
Azure storage account
containers in azure storage accounts
blobs in a container
To implement blob storage, you configure several settings
blob container options
blob types and upload options
blob storage access tiers
blob lifecycle rules
blob object replication options
![[blob-storage-diagram.png]]
Things to consider when implementing Azure Blob storage
Consider browser uploads
consider distributed access
consider streaming data
consider archiving and recovery
consider application access
Blob Containers
Azure blob storage uses a container resource to group a set of blobs. A blob cant exist by itself in Blob storage. A blob must be stored in a container resource.
All blobs must be in a container
A container can store an unlimited number of blobs
An azure storage account can contain an unlimited number of containers
While configuring a container you have an option called Public access level, The access level specifies whether the container and its blobs can be accessed publicly There are three access level choices - Private: prohibit anonymous access to the container and blobs - Blob: allow anonymous public read access for the blobs only - Container: allow anonymous public read and list access to the entire container, including the blobs.
Blob access tiers
Hot tier
Optimized for frequent reads and write of objects in azure storage account. By default, new storage accounts are created in the Hot tier. This tier has the lowest access costs, but higher storage costs than the Cool and Archive tiers
Cool tier
Optimized for storing large amounts of data thats infrequently accessed. This tier is intended for data that remains in the cool tier for at least 30 days. This content shouldnt be viewed frequently but it needs to be immediately available. Storing data in the cool tier is more cost effective. Accessing data in the cool tier can be more expensive than accessing data in the Hot tier.
Cold tier
Also optimized for storing large amounts of data thats infrequently accessed. This tier is intended for data that can remain in the tier for at least 90 days.
Archive tier
Is an offline tier thats optimized for data that can tolerate several hours of retrieval latency. Data must remain in the archive tier for at least 180 days or be subject to an early deletion charge. This tier is the most cost effective option for storing data. Accessing data is more expensive in the Archive tier than accessing data in the other tiers.
Blob lifecycle management rules
Azure blob storage lifecycle management policy rules to accomplish several tasks
Transition blobs to a cooler storage tier to optimize for performance and cost
delete blobs at the end of their lifecycles
define rule based conditions to run once per day at the azure storage account level
apply rule based conditions to container or a subset of blobs
Blob object replication
Object replication copes of blobs in a container asynchronously according to policy rules that you configure.
During the replication process, the following contents are copies from the source container to the destination container
Blob contents
blob metadata and properties
any versions of data associated with the blob
Object replication requires that blob versioning is enabled on both the source and destination accounts
object replication doesnt support snapshots. Any snapshots on a blob in the source account arent replicated to the destination account
object replication is supported when the source and destination accounts are in the Hot, Coo, Cold tier. The source and destination accounts can be in different tiers.
When you configure object replication, you create a replication policy that specifies the source azure account and the destination storage account
replication policy includes one or more rules that specify a source container and a destination container. The policy identifies the blobs in the source container to replicate.
Things to consider when configuring blob object replication
consider latency reductions
consider efficiency for compute workloads
consider data distribution
consider costs benefits
Upload blobs
A blob can be any type of data and any size file.
Azure storage offers three types of blobs
Block blobs: consists of blocks of data that are assembled to make a blob. Ideal for storing text and binary data in the cloud like files, images and videos
Append blobs: similar to block blob because the append blob also consists of blocks of data. The blocks of data in the append blob are optimized for append operations.
Page blobs: can be up to 8TB in size. Are more efficient for frequent read/write operations. Azure Virtual Machines uses page blobs for operating system disk and data disks.
Once you create a blob - you cant change its type.
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