Manage Azure resources by using Azure PowerShell
Learn how to use Azure PowerShell with Azure Resource Manager to manage your Azure resources. For managing resource groups, see Manage Azure resource groups by using Azure PowerShell.
Other articles about managing resources:
Deploy resources to an existing resource group
You can deploy Azure resources directly by using Azure PowerShell, or deploy a Resource Manager template to create Azure resources.
Deploy a resource
The following script creates a storage account.
$resourceGroupName = Read-Host -Prompt "Enter the Resource Group name"
$location = Read-Host -Prompt "Enter the location (i.e. centralus)"
$storageAccountName = Read-Host -Prompt "Enter the storage account name"
# Create the storage account.
$storageAccount = New-AzStorageAccount -ResourceGroupName $resourceGroupName `
-Name $storageAccountName `
-Location $location `
-SkuName "Standard_LRS"
# Retrieve the context.
$ctx = $storageAccount.Context
Deploy a template
The following script deploys a Quickstart template to create a storage account. For more information, see Quickstart: Create Azure Resource Manager templates by using Visual Studio Code.
$resourceGroupName = Read-Host -Prompt "Enter the Resource Group name"
$location = Read-Host -Prompt "Enter the location (i.e. centralus)"
$templateUri = "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Azure/azure-quickstart-templates/master/quickstarts/microsoft.storage/storage-account-create/azuredeploy.json"
New-AzResourceGroupDeployment -ResourceGroupName $resourceGroupName -TemplateUri $templateUri -Location $location
For more information, see Deploy resources with Resource Manager templates and Azure PowerShell.
Deploy a resource group and resources
You can create a resource group and deploy resources to the group. For more information, see Create resource group and deploy resources.
Deploy resources to multiple subscriptions or resource groups
Typically, you deploy all the resources in your template to a single resource group. However, there are scenarios where you want to deploy a set of resources together but place them in different resource groups or subscriptions. For more information, see Deploy Azure resources to multiple subscriptions or resource groups.
Delete resources
The following script shows how to delete a storage account.
$resourceGroupName = Read-Host -Prompt "Enter the Resource Group name"
$storageAccountName = Read-Host -Prompt "Enter the storage account name"
Remove-AzStorageAccount -ResourceGroupName $resourceGroupName -AccountName $storageAccountName
For more information about how Azure Resource Manager orders the deletion of resources, see Azure Resource Manager resource group deletion.
Move resources
The following script shows how to remove a storage account from one resource group to another resource group.
$srcResourceGroupName = Read-Host -Prompt "Enter the source Resource Group name"
$destResourceGroupName = Read-Host -Prompt "Enter the destination Resource Group name"
$storageAccountName = Read-Host -Prompt "Enter the storage account name"
$storageAccount = Get-AzResource -ResourceGroupName $srcResourceGroupName -ResourceName $storageAccountName
Move-AzResource -DestinationResourceGroupName $destResourceGroupName -ResourceId $storageAccount.ResourceId
For more information, see Move resources to new resource group or subscription.
Lock resources
Locking prevents other users in your organization from accidentally deleting or modifying critical resources, such as Azure subscription, resource group, or resource.
The following script locks a storage account so the account can't be deleted.
$resourceGroupName = Read-Host -Prompt "Enter the Resource Group name"
$storageAccountName = Read-Host -Prompt "Enter the storage account name"
New-AzResourceLock -LockName LockStorage -LockLevel CanNotDelete -ResourceGroupName $resourceGroupName -ResourceName $storageAccountName -ResourceType Microsoft.Storage/storageAccounts
The following script gets all locks for a storage account:
$resourceGroupName = Read-Host -Prompt "Enter the Resource Group name"
$storageAccountName = Read-Host -Prompt "Enter the storage account name"
Get-AzResourceLock -ResourceGroupName $resourceGroupName -ResourceName $storageAccountName -ResourceType Microsoft.Storage/storageAccounts
The following script deletes a lock of a storage account:
$resourceGroupName = Read-Host -Prompt "Enter the Resource Group name"
$storageAccountName = Read-Host -Prompt "Enter the storage account name"
$lockId = (Get-AzResourceLock -ResourceGroupName $resourceGroupName -ResourceName $storageAccountName -ResourceType Microsoft.Storage/storageAccounts).LockId
Remove-AzResourceLock -LockId $lockId
For more information, see Lock resources with Azure Resource Manager.
Tag resources
Tagging helps organizing your resource group and resources logically. For information, see Using tags to organize your Azure resources.
Manage access to resources
Azure role-based access control (Azure RBAC) is the way that you manage access to resources in Azure. For more information, see Add or remove Azure role assignments using Azure PowerShell.
Next steps
- To learn Azure Resource Manager, see Azure Resource Manager overview.
- To learn the Resource Manager template syntax, see Understand the structure and syntax of Azure Resource Manager templates.
- To learn how to develop templates, see the step-by-step tutorials.
- To view the Azure Resource Manager template schemas, see template reference.