Updated: July 15, 2020 (October 17, 2016)
SidebarDefining Azure VM Requirements
There are two typical scenarios for deploying Azure VMs:
- Migrating existing physical or virtual servers from on-premises or other hosted data centers, sometimes referred to as “lift and shift”
- Creating entirely new workloads running on newly deployed virtual machines (VMs).
When migrating from existing servers, organizations might find it worthwhile to benchmark the performance of their existing servers prior to evaluating Azure services to determine a baseline for their workload running on Azure VMs. The Microsoft Assessment and Planning Toolkit is an agentless, automated, multiproduct planning and assessment tool that can analyze the existing deployment of servers and help define the requirements needed to virtualize that deployment in Azure VMs.
For entirely new VM workloads, organizations need to understand the intent of the available VM families, perform capacity planning and testing, and select a VM size before putting a workload into production. Moving from one family to another can present challenges, but Azure VMs can be resized up or down within a family relatively easily, provided the system can handle individual VMs being unavailable while they are resized.
Atlas Members have full access
Get access to this and thousands of other unbiased analyses, roadmaps, decision kits, infographics, reference guides, and more, all included with membership. Comprehensive access to the most in-depth and unbiased expertise for Microsoft enterprise decision-making is waiting.
Membership OptionsAlready have an account? Login Now