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Quickstart: Deploy an Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS) Automatic cluster (preview)

Applies to: ✔️ AKS Automatic (preview)

Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS) Automatic (preview) provides the easiest managed Kubernetes experience for developers, DevOps engineers, and platform engineers. Ideal for modern and AI applications, AKS Automatic automates AKS cluster setup and operations and embeds best practice configurations. Users of any skill level can benefit from the security, performance, and dependability of AKS Automatic for their applications.

In this quickstart, you learn to:

  • Deploy an AKS Automatic cluster.
  • Run a sample multi-container application with a group of microservices and web front ends simulating a retail scenario.

Before you begin

This quickstart assumes a basic understanding of Kubernetes concepts. For more information, see Kubernetes core concepts for Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS).

  • This article requires version 2.57.0 or later of the Azure CLI. If you're using Azure Cloud Shell, the latest version is already installed there.

  • This article requires the aks-preview Azure CLI extension version 3.0.0b13 or later.

  • If you have multiple Azure subscriptions, select the appropriate subscription ID in which the resources should be billed using the az account set command.

  • Register the AutomaticSKUPreview feature in your Azure subscription.

  • The identity creating the cluster should also have the following permissions on the subscription:

    • Microsoft.Authorization/policyAssignments/write
    • Microsoft.Authorization/policyAssignments/read

Important

Make sure your subscription has quota for 24 vCPUs of the Standard_DS4_v2 virtual machine for the region you're deploying the cluster to. You can view quotas for specific VM-families and submit quota increase requests through the Azure portal. .png

  • To deploy a Bicep file, you need to write access on the resources you create and access to all operations on the Microsoft.Resources/deployments resource type. For example, to create a virtual machine, you need Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines/write and Microsoft.Resources/deployments/* permissions. For a list of roles and permissions, see Azure built-in roles.

Install the aks-preview Azure CLI extension

Important

AKS preview features are available on a self-service, opt-in basis. Previews are provided "as is" and "as available," and they're excluded from the service-level agreements and limited warranty. AKS previews are partially covered by customer support on a best-effort basis. As such, these features aren't meant for production use. For more information, see the following support articles:

To install the aks-preview extension, run the following command:

az extension add --name aks-preview

Run the following command to update to the latest version of the extension released:

az extension update --name aks-preview

Register the feature flags

To use AKS Automatic in preview, you must register feature flags for other required features. Register the following flags using the az feature register command.

az feature register --namespace Microsoft.ContainerService --name EnableAPIServerVnetIntegrationPreview
az feature register --namespace Microsoft.ContainerService --name NRGLockdownPreview
az feature register --namespace Microsoft.ContainerService --name SafeguardsPreview
az feature register --namespace Microsoft.ContainerService --name NodeAutoProvisioningPreview
az feature register --namespace Microsoft.ContainerService --name DisableSSHPreview
az feature register --namespace Microsoft.ContainerService --name AutomaticSKUPreview

Verify the registration status by using the az feature show command. It takes a few minutes for the status to show Registered:

az feature show --namespace Microsoft.ContainerService --name AutomaticSKUPreview

When the status reflects Registered, refresh the registration of the Microsoft.ContainerService resource provider by using the az provider register command:

az provider register --namespace Microsoft.ContainerService

Create a resource group

An Azure resource group is a logical group in which Azure resources are deployed and managed.

The following example creates a resource group named myResourceGroup in the eastus location.

Create a resource group using the az group create command.

az group create --name myResourceGroup --location eastus

The following sample output resembles successful creation of the resource group:

{
  "id": "/subscriptions/<guid>/resourceGroups/myResourceGroup",
  "location": "eastus",
  "managedBy": null,
  "name": "myResourceGroup",
  "properties": {
    "provisioningState": "Succeeded"
  },
  "tags": null
}

Create an AKS Automatic cluster

To create an AKS Automatic cluster, use the az aks create command. The following example creates a cluster named myAKSAutomaticCluster with Managed Prometheus and Container Insights integration enabled.

az aks create \
    --resource-group myResourceGroup \
    --name myAKSAutomaticCluster \
    --sku automatic

After a few minutes, the command completes and returns JSON-formatted information about the cluster.

Connect to the cluster

To manage a Kubernetes cluster, use the Kubernetes command-line client, kubectl. kubectl is already installed if you use Azure Cloud Shell. To install kubectl locally, run the az aks install-cli command. AKS Automatic clusters are configured with Microsoft Entra ID for Kubernetes role-based access control (RBAC). When you create a cluster using the Azure CLI, your user is assigned built-in roles for Azure Kubernetes Service RBAC Cluster Admin.

Configure kubectl to connect to your Kubernetes cluster using the az aks get-credentials command. This command downloads credentials and configures the Kubernetes CLI to use them.

az aks get-credentials --resource-group myResourceGroup --name myAKSAutomaticCluster

Verify the connection to your cluster using the kubectl get command. This command returns a list of the cluster nodes.

kubectl get nodes

The following sample output will show how you're asked to log in.

To sign in, use a web browser to open the page https://microsoft.com/devicelogin and enter the code AAAAAAAAA to authenticate.

After you log in, the following sample output shows the managed node pools created in the previous steps. Make sure the node status is Ready.

NAME                                STATUS   ROLES   AGE     VERSION
aks-default-f8vj2                   Ready    agent   2m26s   v1.28.5
aks-nodepool1-13213685-vmss000000   Ready    agent   2m26s   v1.28.5
aks-nodepool1-13213685-vmss000001   Ready    agent   2m26s   v1.28.5
aks-nodepool1-13213685-vmss000002   Ready    agent   2m26s   v1.28.5

Create Automatic Kubernetes Cluster

  1. To create an AKS Automatic cluster, search for Kubernetes Services, and select Automatic Kubernetes cluster from the drop-down options.

    The screenshot of the entry point for creating an AKS Automatic cluster in the Azure portal.

  2. On the Basics tab, fill in all the mandatory fields required to get started: Subscription, Resource Group, Cluster name, and Region

    The screenshot of the Create - Basics Tab for an AKS Automatic cluster in the Azure portal.

    If the prerequisites aren't met and the subscription requires registration of the preview flags, there will be an error shown under the Subscription field:

    The screenshot of the error shown when a  subscription doesn't have preview flags registered while creating an AKS Automatic cluster in the Azure portal.

  3. On the Monitoring tab, choose your monitoring configurations from Azure Monitor, Managed Prometheus, Managed Grafana, and/or configure alerts. Add tags (optional), and proceed to create the cluster.

    The screenshot of the Monitoring Tab while creating an AKS Automatic cluster in the Azure portal.

  4. Get started with configuring your first application from GitHub and set up an automated deployment pipeline.

    The screenshot of the Get Started Tab on Overview Blade after creating an AKS Automatic cluster in the Azure portal.

Connect to the cluster

To manage a Kubernetes cluster, use the Kubernetes command-line client, kubectl. kubectl is already installed if you use Azure Cloud Shell. To install kubectl locally, run the az aks install-cli command. AKS Automatic clusters are configured with Microsoft Entra ID for Kubernetes role-based access control (RBAC). When you create a cluster using the Azure portal, your user is assigned built-in roles for Azure Kubernetes Service RBAC Cluster Admin.

Configure kubectl to connect to your Kubernetes cluster using the az aks get-credentials command. This command downloads credentials and configures the Kubernetes CLI to use them.

az aks get-credentials --resource-group myResourceGroup --name myAKSAutomaticCluster

Verify the connection to your cluster using the kubectl get command. This command returns a list of the cluster nodes.

kubectl get nodes

The following sample output will show how you're asked to log in.

To sign in, use a web browser to open the page https://microsoft.com/devicelogin and enter the code AAAAAAAAA to authenticate.

After you log in, the following sample output shows the managed node pools created in the previous steps. Make sure the node status is Ready.

NAME                                STATUS   ROLES   AGE     VERSION
aks-default-f8vj2                   Ready    agent   2m26s   v1.28.5
aks-nodepool1-13213685-vmss000000   Ready    agent   2m26s   v1.28.5
aks-nodepool1-13213685-vmss000001   Ready    agent   2m26s   v1.28.5
aks-nodepool1-13213685-vmss000002   Ready    agent   2m26s   v1.28.5

Create a resource group

An Azure resource group is a logical group in which Azure resources are deployed and managed. When you create a resource group, you're prompted to specify a location. This location is the storage location of your resource group metadata and where your resources run in Azure if you don't specify another region during resource creation.

The following example creates a resource group named myResourceGroup in the eastus location.

Create a resource group using the az group create command.

az group create --name myResourceGroup --location eastus

The following sample output resembles successful creation of the resource group:

{
  "id": "/subscriptions/<guid>/resourceGroups/myResourceGroup",
  "location": "eastus",
  "managedBy": null,
  "name": "myResourceGroup",
  "properties": {
    "provisioningState": "Succeeded"
  },
  "tags": null
}

Review the Bicep file

This Bicep file defines an AKS Automatic cluster. While in preview, you need to specify the system nodepool agent pool profile.

@description('The name of the managed cluster resource.')
param clusterName string = 'myAKSAutomaticCluster'

@description('The location of the managed cluster resource.')
param location string = resourceGroup().location

resource aks 'Microsoft.ContainerService/managedClusters@2024-03-02-preview' = {
  name: clusterName
  location: location  
  sku: {
		name: 'Automatic'
  		tier: 'Standard'
  }
  properties: {
    agentPoolProfiles: [
      {
        name: 'systempool'
        count: 3
        vmSize: 'Standard_DS4_v2'
        osType: 'Linux'
        mode: 'System'
      }
    ]
  }
  identity: {
    type: 'SystemAssigned'
  }
}

For more information about the resource defined in the Bicep file, see the Microsoft.ContainerService/managedClusters reference.

Deploy the Bicep file

  1. Save the Bicep file as main.bicep to your local computer.

    Important

    The Bicep file sets the clusterName param to the string myAKSAutomaticCluster. If you want to use a different cluster name, make sure to update the string to your preferred cluster name before saving the file to your computer.

  2. Deploy the Bicep file using the Azure CLI.

    az deployment group create --resource-group myResourceGroup --template-file main.bicep
    

    It takes a few minutes to create the AKS cluster. Wait for the cluster to be successfully deployed before you move on to the next step.

Connect to the cluster

To manage a Kubernetes cluster, use the Kubernetes command-line client, kubectl. kubectl is already installed if you use Azure Cloud Shell. To install kubectl locally, run the az aks install-cli command. AKS Automatic clusters are configured with Microsoft Entra ID for Kubernetes role-based access control (RBAC). When you create a cluster using Bicep, you need to assign one of the built-in roles such as Azure Kubernetes Service RBAC Reader, Azure Kubernetes Service RBAC Writer, Azure Kubernetes Service RBAC Admin, or Azure Kubernetes Service RBAC Cluster Admin to your users, scoped to the cluster or a specific namespace. Also make sure your users have the Azure Kubernetes Service Cluster User built-in role to be able to do run az aks get-credentials, and then get the kubeconfig of your AKS cluster using the az aks get-credentials command.

Configure kubectl to connect to your Kubernetes cluster using the az aks get-credentials command. This command downloads credentials and configures the Kubernetes CLI to use them.

az aks get-credentials --resource-group myResourceGroup --name

Verify the connection to your cluster using the kubectl get command. This command returns a list of the cluster nodes.

kubectl get nodes

The following sample output will show how you're asked to log in.

To sign in, use a web browser to open the page https://microsoft.com/devicelogin and enter the code AAAAAAAAA to authenticate.

After you log in, the following sample output shows the managed node pools created in the previous steps. Make sure the node status is Ready.

NAME                                STATUS   ROLES   AGE     VERSION
aks-default-f8vj2                   Ready    agent   2m26s   v1.28.5
aks-nodepool1-13213685-vmss000000   Ready    agent   2m26s   v1.28.5
aks-nodepool1-13213685-vmss000001   Ready    agent   2m26s   v1.28.5
aks-nodepool1-13213685-vmss000002   Ready    agent   2m26s   v1.28.5

Deploy the application

To deploy the application, you use a manifest file to create all the objects required to run the AKS Store application. A Kubernetes manifest file defines a cluster's desired state, such as which container images to run. The manifest includes the following Kubernetes deployments and services:

Screenshot of Azure Store sample architecture.

  • Store front: Web application for customers to view products and place orders.
  • Product service: Shows product information.
  • Order service: Places orders.
  • Rabbit MQ: Message queue for an order queue.

Note

We don't recommend running stateful containers, such as Rabbit MQ, without persistent storage for production. These are used here for simplicity, but we recommend using managed services, such as Azure Cosmos DB or Azure Service Bus.

  1. Create a namespace aks-store-demo to deploy the Kubernetes resources into.

    kubectl create ns aks-store-demo
    
  2. Deploy the application using the kubectl apply command into the aks-store-demo namespace. The YAML file defining the deployment is on GitHub.

    kubectl apply -n aks-store-demo -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Azure-Samples/aks-store-demo/main/aks-store-ingress-quickstart.yaml
    

    The following sample output shows the deployments and services:

    statefulset.apps/rabbitmq created
    configmap/rabbitmq-enabled-plugins created
    service/rabbitmq created
    deployment.apps/order-service created
    service/order-service created
    deployment.apps/product-service created
    service/product-service created
    deployment.apps/store-front created
    service/store-front created
    ingress/store-front created
    

Test the application

When the application runs, a Kubernetes service exposes the application front end to the internet. This process can take a few minutes to complete.

  1. Check the status of the deployed pods using the kubectl get pods command. Make sure all pods are Running before proceeding. If this is the first workload you deploy, it may take a few minutes for node auto provisioning to create a node pool to run the pods.

    kubectl get pods -n aks-store-demo
    
  2. Check for a public IP address for the store-front application. Monitor progress using the kubectl get service command with the --watch argument.

    kubectl get ingress store-front -n aks-store-demo --watch
    

    The ADDRESS output for the store-front service initially shows empty:

    NAME          CLASS                                HOSTS   ADDRESS        PORTS   AGE
    store-front   webapprouting.kubernetes.azure.com   *                      80      12m
    
  3. Once the ADDRESS changes from blank to an actual public IP address, use CTRL-C to stop the kubectl watch process.

    The following sample output shows a valid public IP address assigned to the service:

    NAME          CLASS                                HOSTS   ADDRESS        PORTS   AGE
    store-front   webapprouting.kubernetes.azure.com   *       4.255.22.196   80      12m
    
  4. Open a web browser to the external IP address of your ingress to see the Azure Store app in action.

    Screenshot of AKS Store sample application.

Delete the cluster

If you don't plan on going through the AKS tutorial, clean up unnecessary resources to avoid Azure charges. Run the az group delete command to remove the resource group, container service, and all related resources.

az group delete --name myResourceGroup --yes --no-wait

Note

The AKS cluster was created with a system-assigned managed identity, which is the default identity option used in this quickstart. The platform manages this identity, so you don't need to manually remove it.

Next steps

In this quickstart, you deployed a Kubernetes cluster using AKS Automatic and then deployed a simple multi-container application to it. This sample application is for demo purposes only and doesn't represent all the best practices for Kubernetes applications. For guidance on creating full solutions with AKS for production, see AKS solution guidance.

To learn more about AKS Automatic, continue to the introduction.