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You can use this account type to connect Binary Snap Pack Snaps with data sources that use the Azure Storage account. An Azure storage account contains all of your Azure Storage data objects like blobs, files, queues, and tables. For more information about Azure storage accounts, see Storage account overview. In this article, you learn to create a storage account using the Azure portal.
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Log into the Microsoft Azure Portal.
Click Create a resource under Azure Services on the Portal Home page.
Select Storage accounts and specify the details in all tabs required details under each tab for the storage accounts. The details to be filled in are as specified in Refer to the storage details table for the configuration settings.
Basic: Project and Instance details.
Advanced: Security and Blob Storage details.
Networking: Network Connectivity connectivity and Routing routing details.
Data protection: Recovery and Tracking details.
Encryption: Encryption details.
Tags: Tag details.
Review: Complete details of the Storage Accountaccount.
Tab Name | Field Name | Type | Description | |
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Basics | Subscription | String | Required. Select the subscription in which to create the new storage account. | |
Resource group | String | Required. You can create a new resource group for this storage account , or select an existing one. For more information, refer to Resource groups. | ||
Storage account name | String | Specify a unique name for your storage account.
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Region | drop-down | Select the appropriate region for your storage account from the drop-down list. For more information, refer to Regions and Availability Zones in Azure. All the regions are not supported by all types of storage accounts or redundancy configurations. For more information, see refer to Azure Storage redundancy. | ||
Performance | Radio button | Select the appropriate performance as per the purpose of your accounts. The options are:
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Redundancy | drop-down | Select your desired redundancy configuration. The options available are:
If you select a geo-redundant configuration (GRS or GZRS), your data is replicated to a data center in a different region. | ||
Make read access to data available in the event of regional unavailability. | Checkbox | Select this checkbox to get the read access to data in the secondary region. | ||
Advanced | Require secure transfer for REST API operations | Checkbox | Optional. Require secure transfer to ensure that incoming requests to this storage account are made only via HTTPS (default). Recommended for optimal security. For more information, see Require secure transfer to ensure secure connections. | |
Enable blob public access | Checkbox | Optional. When enabled, this setting allows a user with the appropriate permissions to enable anonymous public access to a container in the storage account (default). For more information, see Prevent anonymous public read access to containers and blobs. | ||
Enable storage account key access | Checkbox | Optional. When enabled, this setting allows clients to authorize requests to the storage account using either the account access keys or an Azure Active Directory (Azure AD) account (default). For more information, see Prevent Shared Key authorization for an Azure Storage account. | ||
Default to Azure Active Directory authorization in the Azure portal | Checkbox | Optional. When enabled, the Azure portal authorizes data operations with the user's Azure AD credentials by default. For more information, see Default to Azure AD authorization in the Azure portal. | ||
Minimum TLS version | drop-down | Required. Select the minimum version of Transport Layer Security (TLS) for incoming requests to the storage account. For more information, see Enforce a minimum required version of Transport Layer Security (TLS) for requests to a storage account. | ||
Enable hierarchical namespace | Checkbox | Optional. To use this storage account for Azure Data Lake Storage Gen2 workloads, configure a hierarchical namespace. For more information, see Introduction to Azure Data Lake Storage Gen2. | ||
Enable SFTP | Checkbox | Optional. Enable the use of Secure File Transfer Protocol (SFTP) to securely transfer of data over the internet. For more information, see Secure File Transfer (SFTP) protocol support in Azure Blob Storage. | ||
Enable network file share (NFS) v3 | Checkbox | Optional. NFS v3 provides Linux file system compatibility at object storage scale enables Linux clients to mount a container in Blob storage from an Azure Virtual Machine (VM) or a computer on-premises. For more information, see Network File System (NFS) 3.0 protocol support in Azure Blob storage. | ||
Allow cross-tenant replication | Checkbox | Required. By default, users with appropriate permissions can configure object replication across Azure AD tenants. To prevent replication across tenants, deselect this option. For more information, refer to Prevent replication across Azure AD tenants. | ||
Enable large file shares | Checkbox | Optional. Available only for standard file shares with the LRS or ZRS redundancies. | ||
Networking | Network access | Radio button | Required. By default, incoming network traffic is routed to the public endpoint for your storage account. You can specify that traffic must be routed to the public endpoint through an Azure virtual network. You can also configure private endpoints for your storage account. | |
Routing preference | Radio button | Required. The network routing preference specifies how network traffic is routed to the public endpoint of your storage account from clients over the internet. By default, a new storage account uses Microsoft network routing. | ||
Data protection | Enable point-in-time restore for containers | Checkbox | Provides protection against accidental deletion or corruption by enabling you to restore block blob data to an earlier state. For more information, refer to Point-in-time restore for block blobs. Enabling point-in-time restore also enables blob versioning, blob soft delete, and blob change feed. | |
Enable soft delete for blobs | Checkbox | Optional. Soft delete enables you to recover blobs that were previously marked for deletion, including blobs that were overwritten. | ||
Enable soft delete for blobs | Checkbox | Optional. Blob soft delete protects an individual blob, snapshot, or version from accidental deletes or overwrites by maintaining the deleted data in the system for a specified retention period. | ||
Enable soft delete for containers | Checkbox | Container soft delete protects a container and its contents from accidental deletes by maintaining the deleted data in the system for a specified retention period. | ||
Enable soft delete for file shares | Checkbox | Optional. Soft delete for file shares protects a file share and its contents from accidental deletes by maintaining the deleted data in the system for a specified retention period. For more information, refer to Prevent accidental deletion of Azure file shares. | ||
Enable versioning for blobs | Checkbox | Optional. Blob versioning automatically saves the state of a blob in a previous version when the blob is overwritten. For more information, refer to Blob versioning. | ||
Enable blob change feed | Checkbox | Optional. The blob change feed provides transaction logs of all changes to all blobs in your storage account, as well as to their metadata. For more information, refer to Change feed support in Azure Blob Storage. | ||
Enable version-level immutability support | Checkbox | Optional. Enable support for immutability policies that are scoped to the blob version. For more information, refer to Enable version-level immutability support on a storage account. | ||
Encryption | Encryption type | Radio button | By default, data in the storage account is encrypted by using Microsoft-managed keys. You can rely on Microsoft-managed keys for the encryption of your data, or you can manage encryption with your own keys. The options available are:
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Enable support for customer-managed keys | Radio button | By default, customer managed keys can be used to encrypt only blobs and files. Set this option to All service types (blobs, files, tables, and queues) to enable support for customer-managed keys for all services. You are not required to use customer-managed keys if you choose this option. | ||
Enable infrastructure encryption | Checkbox | Required if Encryption type field is set to Customer-managed keys. The available options are:
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User-assigned identity | Radio button | Required if Encryption type field is set to Customer-managed keys. If you are configuring customer-managed keys at create time for the storage account, you must provide a user-assigned identity to use for authorizing access to the key vault. | ||
Enable infrastructure encryption | Checkbox | Optional. By default, infrastructure encryption is not enabled. Enable infrastructure encryption to encrypt your data at both the service level and the infrastructure level. | ||
Tags | Name Value Resource | Dropdown | Optional. Tags are name/value pairs that enable you to categorize resources and helps in billing purpose by the same tag to multiple resources and resource groups. For more information refer to Tags. | |
Review | NA | Labels | Provides details of all the tabs for you to review and proceed to create the Resource (storage account). |
4. In the Tags tab, you can specify Resource Manager tags to help organize your Azure resources. For more information, see refer to Tag resources, resource groups, and subscriptions for the logical organization.
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Check access to the Resource
From the navigation panel, select Access control (IAM) to check the apps that have permission to access the storage account created.
Create an Azure Portal application for the storage account
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Navigate to the Snap of your choice and set up the account with the following details noted in the earlier steps.
Tenant ID
Access ID
Secret key
Click Save and validate the Snap with the Azure Data Lake Gen2 account.