Quickstart: Create an Azure Firewall with multiple public IP addresses - Bicep
In this quickstart, you use a Bicep file to deploy an Azure Firewall with multiple public IP addresses from a public IP address prefix. The deployed firewall has NAT rule collection rules that allow RDP connections to two Windows Server 2019 virtual machines.
Bicep is a domain-specific language (DSL) that uses declarative syntax to deploy Azure resources. It provides concise syntax, reliable type safety, and support for code reuse. Bicep offers the best authoring experience for your infrastructure-as-code solutions in Azure.
For more information about Azure Firewall with multiple public IP addresses, see Deploy an Azure Firewall with multiple public IP addresses using Azure PowerShell.
Prerequisites
- An Azure account with an active subscription. Create an account for free.
Review the Bicep file
This Bicep file creates an Azure Firewall with two public IP addresses, along with the necessary resources to support the Azure Firewall.
The Bicep file used in this quickstart is from Azure Quickstart Templates.
@description('Admin username for the backend servers')
param adminUsername string
@description('Password for the admin account on the backend servers')
@secure()
param adminPassword string
@description('Location for all resources.')
param location string = resourceGroup().location
@description('Size of the virtual machine.')
param vmSize string = 'Standard_B2ms'
var virtualMachineName = 'myVM'
var virtualNetworkName = 'myVNet'
var networkInterfaceName = 'net-int'
var ipConfigName = 'ipconfig'
var ipPrefixName = 'public_ip_prefix'
var ipPrefixSize = 31
var publicIpAddressName = 'public_ip'
var nsgName = 'vm-nsg'
var firewallName = 'FW-01'
var vnetPrefix = '10.0.0.0/16'
var fwSubnetPrefix = '10.0.0.0/24'
var backendSubnetPrefix = '10.0.1.0/24'
var azureFirewallSubnetId = subnet.id
var azureFirewallIpConfigurations = [for i in range(0, 2): {
name: 'IpConf${(i + 1)}'
properties: {
subnet: ((i == 0) ? json('{"id": "${azureFirewallSubnetId}"}') : null)
publicIPAddress: {
id: publicIPAddress[i].id
}
}
}]
resource nsg 'Microsoft.Network/networkSecurityGroups@2023-09-01' = [for i in range(0, 2): {
name: '${nsgName}${i + 1}'
location: location
properties: {
securityRules: [
{
name: 'RDP'
properties: {
protocol: 'Tcp'
sourcePortRange: '*'
destinationPortRange: '3389'
sourceAddressPrefix: '*'
destinationAddressPrefix: '*'
access: 'Allow'
priority: 300
direction: 'Inbound'
}
}
]
}
}]
resource ipprefix 'Microsoft.Network/publicIPPrefixes@2023-09-01' = {
name: ipPrefixName
location: location
properties: {
prefixLength: ipPrefixSize
publicIPAddressVersion: 'IPv4'
}
sku: {
name: 'Standard'
}
}
resource publicIPAddress 'Microsoft.Network/publicIPAddresses@2023-09-01' = [for i in range(0, 2): {
name: '${publicIpAddressName}${i + 1}'
location: location
sku: {
name: 'Standard'
}
properties: {
publicIPAddressVersion: 'IPv4'
publicIPAllocationMethod: 'Static'
publicIPPrefix: {
id: ipprefix.id
}
idleTimeoutInMinutes: 4
}
}]
resource virtualNetwork 'Microsoft.Network/virtualNetworks@2023-09-01' = {
name: virtualNetworkName
location: location
properties: {
addressSpace: {
addressPrefixes: [
vnetPrefix
]
}
subnets: [
{
name: 'myBackendSubnet'
properties: {
addressPrefix: backendSubnetPrefix
routeTable: {
id: routeTable.id
}
privateEndpointNetworkPolicies: 'Enabled'
privateLinkServiceNetworkPolicies: 'Enabled'
}
}
]
enableDdosProtection: false
enableVmProtection: false
}
}
resource subnet 'Microsoft.Network/virtualNetworks/subnets@2023-09-01' = {
parent: virtualNetwork
name: 'AzureFirewallSubnet'
properties: {
addressPrefix: fwSubnetPrefix
privateEndpointNetworkPolicies: 'Enabled'
privateLinkServiceNetworkPolicies: 'Enabled'
}
}
resource virtualMachine 'Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines@2023-09-01' = [for i in range(0, 2): {
name: '${virtualMachineName}${i+1}'
location: location
properties: {
hardwareProfile: {
vmSize: vmSize
}
storageProfile: {
imageReference: {
publisher: 'MicrosoftWindowsServer'
offer: 'WindowsServer'
sku: '2019-Datacenter'
version: 'latest'
}
osDisk: {
osType: 'Windows'
createOption: 'FromImage'
caching: 'ReadWrite'
managedDisk: {
storageAccountType: 'StandardSSD_LRS'
}
diskSizeGB: 127
}
}
osProfile: {
computerName: '${virtualMachineName}${i+1}'
adminUsername: adminUsername
adminPassword: adminPassword
windowsConfiguration: {
provisionVMAgent: true
enableAutomaticUpdates: true
}
allowExtensionOperations: true
}
networkProfile: {
networkInterfaces: [
{
id: netInterface[i].id
}
]
}
}
}]
resource netInterface 'Microsoft.Network/networkInterfaces@2023-09-01' = [for i in range(0, 2): {
name: '${networkInterfaceName}${i + 1}'
location: location
properties: {
ipConfigurations: [
{
name: '${ipConfigName}${i + 1}'
properties: {
subnet: {
id: virtualNetwork.properties.subnets[0].id
}
primary: true
}
}
]
enableAcceleratedNetworking: false
enableIPForwarding: false
networkSecurityGroup: {
id: nsg[i].id
}
}
}]
resource firewall 'Microsoft.Network/azureFirewalls@2023-09-01' = {
name: firewallName
location: location
properties: {
sku: {
name: 'AZFW_VNet'
tier: 'Standard'
}
threatIntelMode: 'Deny'
ipConfigurations: azureFirewallIpConfigurations
applicationRuleCollections: [
{
name: 'web'
properties: {
priority: 100
action: {
type: 'Allow'
}
rules: [
{
name: 'wan-address'
protocols: [
{
protocolType: 'Http'
port: 80
}
{
protocolType: 'Https'
port: 443
}
]
targetFqdns: [
'getmywanip.com'
]
sourceAddresses: [
'*'
]
}
{
name: 'google'
protocols: [
{
protocolType: 'Http'
port: 80
}
{
protocolType: 'Https'
port: 443
}
]
targetFqdns: [
'www.google.com'
]
sourceAddresses: [
'10.0.1.0/24'
]
}
{
name: 'wupdate'
protocols: [
{
protocolType: 'Http'
port: 80
}
{
protocolType: 'Https'
port: 443
}
]
fqdnTags: [
'WindowsUpdate'
]
sourceAddresses: [
'*'
]
}
]
}
}
]
natRuleCollections: [
{
name: 'Coll-01'
properties: {
priority: 100
action: {
type: 'Dnat'
}
rules: [
{
name: 'rdp-01'
protocols: [
'TCP'
]
translatedAddress: '10.0.1.4'
translatedPort: '3389'
sourceAddresses: [
'*'
]
destinationAddresses: [
publicIPAddress[0].properties.ipAddress
]
destinationPorts: [
'3389'
]
}
{
name: 'rdp-02'
protocols: [
'TCP'
]
translatedAddress: '10.0.1.5'
translatedPort: '3389'
sourceAddresses: [
'*'
]
destinationAddresses: [
publicIPAddress[1].properties.ipAddress
]
destinationPorts: [
'3389'
]
}
]
}
}
]
}
}
resource routeTable 'Microsoft.Network/routeTables@2023-09-01' = {
name: 'rt-01'
location: location
properties: {
disableBgpRoutePropagation: false
routes: [
{
name: 'fw'
properties: {
addressPrefix: '0.0.0.0/0'
nextHopType: 'VirtualAppliance'
nextHopIpAddress: '10.0.0.4'
}
}
]
}
}
output name string = firewall.name
output resourceId string = firewall.id
output location string = location
output resourceGroupName string = resourceGroup().name
Multiple Azure resources are defined in the template:
- Microsoft.Network/networkSecurityGroups
- Microsoft.Network/publicIPPrefix
- Microsoft.Network/publicIPAddresses
- Microsoft.Network/virtualNetworks
- Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines
- Microsoft.Storage/storageAccounts
- Microsoft.Network/networkInterfaces
- Microsoft.Network/azureFirewalls
- Microsoft.Network/routeTables
Deploy the Bicep file
Save the Bicep file as main.bicep to your local computer.
Deploy the Bicep file using either Azure CLI or Azure PowerShell.
az group create --name exampleRG --location eastus az deployment group create --resource-group exampleRG --template-file main.bicep --parameters adminUsername=<admin-username>
Note
Replace <admin-username> with the admin username for the backend server.
You will be prompt to enter the admin password.
When the deployment finishes, you should see a message indicating the deployment succeeded.
Validate the deployment
In the Azure portal, review the deployed resources. Note the firewall public IP addresses.
Use Remote Desktop Connection to connect to the firewall public IP addresses. Successful connection demonstrates firewall NAT rules that allow the connection to the backend servers.
Clean up resources
When you no longer need the resources that you created with the firewall, delete the resource group. This removes the firewall and all the related resources.
To delete the resource group, call the Remove-AzResourceGroup
cmdlet:
Remove-AzResourceGroup -Name "exampleRG"