Troubleshoot Azure Private Link Service connectivity problems
This article provides step-by-step guidance to validate and diagnose connectivity for your Azure Private Link setup.
With Azure Private Link, you can access Azure platform as a service (PaaS) services and Azure hosted customer or partner services over a private endpoint in your virtual network. Traffic between your virtual network and the service traverses over the Microsoft backbone network, which eliminates exposure from the public internet. You can also create your own private link service in your virtual network and deliver it privately to your customers.
You can enable your service that runs behind the Standard tier of Azure Load Balancer for Private Link access. Consumers of your service can create a private endpoint inside their virtual network and map it to this service to access it privately.
Here are the connectivity scenarios that are available with Private Link:
Virtual network from the same region
Regionally peered virtual networks
Globally peered virtual networks
Customer on-premises over VPN or Azure ExpressRoute circuits
Deployment troubleshooting
For more information on troubleshooting when you're unable to select the source IP address from the subnet of your choice for your private link service, see Disabling network policies on the private link service.
Diagnose connectivity problems
If you experience connectivity problems with your private link setup, review these steps to make sure all the usual configurations are as expected.
Review Private Link configuration by browsing the resource.
a. Go to Private Link Center.
b. On the left pane, select Private link services.
c. Filter and select the private link service that you want to diagnose.
d. Review the private endpoint connections.
Make sure that the private endpoint that you're seeking connectivity from is listed with an Approved connection state.
If the state is Pending, select it and approve it.
Go to the private endpoint that you're connecting from by selecting the name. Make sure the connection status shows as Approved.
After both sides are approved, try the connectivity again.
e. Review Alias on the Overview tab and Resource ID on the Properties tab.
Make sure the Alias and Resource ID information matches the Alias and Resource ID you're using to create a private endpoint to this service.
f. Review Visibility information on the Overview tab.
Make sure that your subscription falls under the Visibility scope.
g. Review Load balancer information on the Overview tab.
You can go to the load balancer by selecting the load balancer link.
Make sure that the load balancer settings are configured as per your expectations.
Review Frontend IP configuration.
Review Backend pools.
Review Load balancing rules.
Make sure the load balancer is working as per the previous settings.
Select a VM in any subnet other than the subnet where the load balancer back-end pool is available.
Try accessing the load balancer front end from the previous VM.
If the connection makes it to the back-end pool as per load-balancing rules, your load balancer is operational.
You can also review the load balancer metric through Azure Monitor to see if data is flowing through the load balancer.
Use Azure Monitor to see if data is flowing.
a. On the private link service resource, select Metrics.
Select Bytes In or Bytes Out.
See if data is flowing when you attempt to connect to the private link service. Expect a delay of approximately 10 minutes.
Use Azure Monitor - Networks for insights and to see a resource view of the resources by going to:
Azure Monitor
Networks
Private Link services
Resource view
Contact the Azure Support team if your problem is still unresolved and a connectivity problem still exists.