Azure physical infrastructure
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Table of Content:
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Physical Infrastructure Overview
- Datacenters: Facilities with resources arranged in racks, with dedicated power, cooling, and networking.
- Global Presence: Azure has datacenters worldwide, grouped into Azure Regions or Availability Zones.
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Regions
- Definition: Geographical areas containing multiple networked datacenters.
- Purpose: To balance workloads and provide resource availability.
- Selection: When deploying resources, you select a region. Some services/features are region-specific.
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Availability Zones
- Definition: Physically separate datacenters within a region, with independent power, cooling, and networking.
- Isolation: Designed to ensure that if one zone fails, others remain operational.
- Use Cases: For high availability and redundancy of critical applications and services.
- Types:
- Zonal Services: Resources pinned to a specific zone (e.g., VMs, managed disks).
- Zone-Redundant Services: Automatically replicated across zones (e.g., zone-redundant storage, SQL Database).
- Non-Regional Services: Resilient to both zone-wide and region-wide outages.
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Region Pairs
- Definition: Most regions are paired with another within the same geography, about 300 miles apart.
- Benefits: Replication across pairs for disaster recovery and minimizing downtime.
- Examples: West US paired with East US, South-East Asia paired with East Asia.
- Advantages:
- Prioritized restoration of one region in each pair during outages.
- Sequential rollout of updates to paired regions.
- Data remains within the same geography for legal purposes.
- One-Direction Pairing: Some regions are paired in only one direction (e.g., West India and South India, Brazil South and South Central US).
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Sovereign Regions
- Purpose: Isolated instances of Azure for compliance or legal reasons.
- Examples:
- US Government: US DoD Central, US Gov Virginia, US Gov Iowa.
- China: China East, China North (operated through a partnership with 21Vianet).