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WordPress on virtual machines

Azure Front Door
Azure Key Vault
Azure Load Balancer
Azure Virtual Network
Azure Virtual Machine Scale Sets

This article describes a solution for hosting a large, storage-intensive installation of WordPress on Azure. The solution maximizes scalability and security. Key solution components include Azure Front Door, Azure Virtual Machines, and Azure NetApp Files.

Architecture

Architecture diagram of a WordPress deployment on Azure Virtual Machine Scale Sets. Azure NetApp Files stores static content.

Download a Visio file of this architecture.

Note

You can extend this solution by implementing tips and recommendations that aren't specific to any particular WordPress hosting method. For general tips for deploying a WordPress installation, see WordPress on Azure.

Dataflow

  • Users access the front-end website through Azure Front Door with Azure Web Application Firewall enabled.
  • Azure Front Door uses an internal instance of Azure Load Balancer as the origin. Azure Front Door retrieves any data that isn't cached.
  • The internal load balancer distributes requests to Azure Virtual Machine Scale Sets. The scale sets consist of Ubuntu web servers.
  • Keys and other secrets are stored in Azure Key Vault.
  • The WordPress application uses a private endpoint to access a flexible server instance of Azure Database for MySQL. The WordPress application retrieves dynamic information from the database.
  • All static content is hosted in Azure NetApp Files and mounted to the virtual machines (VMs) via the NFS protocol.

Components

  • Azure Front Door is a modern cloud content delivery network. As a distributed network of servers, Azure Front Door efficiently delivers web content to users. Content delivery networks minimize latency by storing cached content on edge servers in point-of-presence locations near end users.
  • Azure Virtual Network provides a way for deployed resources to communicate with each other, the internet, and on-premises networks. Virtual networks provide isolation and segmentation. They also filter and route traffic and make it possible to establish connections between various locations. In this solution, the two networks are connected via virtual network peering.
  • Azure DDoS Protection provides enhanced DDoS mitigation features. When you combine these features with application-design best practices, they help defend against DDoS attacks. You should enable DDoS Protection on perimeter virtual networks.
  • Network security groups use a list of security rules to allow or deny inbound or outbound network traffic based on source or destination IP address, port, and protocol. In this scenario's subnets, network security group rules restrict traffic flow between the application components.
  • Load Balancer distributes inbound traffic based on rules and health probe results. A load balancer provides low latency and high throughput. By spreading traffic across multiple servers, a load balancer adds scalability to Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and User Datagram Protocol (UDP) applications. In this scenario, a load balancer distributes traffic from the content delivery network to the front-end web servers.
  • Virtual Machine Scale Sets provides a way to create and manage a group of identical load-balanced VMs. The number of VM instances can automatically increase or decrease in response to demand or a defined schedule. Two separate scale sets are used in this scenario. One is for the front-end web servers that serve content, and one is for the front-end web servers that are used to create new content.
  • Azure NetApp Files provides a fully managed performance-intensive and latency-sensitive storage solution. In this solution, Azure NetApp Files hosts all the WordPress content so that all the pods have access to the data.
  • Azure Cache for Redis is an in-memory data store. You can use Azure Cache for Redis to host a key-value cache in this solution. That cache is shared among all pods and is used for WordPress performance optimization plug-ins.
  • Key Vault stores and controls access to passwords, certificates, and keys.
  • Azure Database for MySQL - flexible server is a relational database service that's based on the open-source MySQL database engine. The flexible server deployment option is a fully managed service that provides granular control and flexibility over database management functions and configuration settings. In this scenario, Azure Database for MySQL stores WordPress data.

Alternatives

Instead of using the Azure Cache for Redis managed service, you can use a self-hosted pod within a VM as the cache.

Scenario details

This example scenario is appropriate for large, storage-intensive installations of WordPress. This deployment model can scale to meet spikes in traffic to the site.

Potential use cases

  • High-traffic blogs that use WordPress as their content management system
  • Business or e-commerce websites that use WordPress

Considerations

These considerations implement the pillars of the Azure Well-Architected Framework, which is a set of guiding tenets that can be used to improve the quality of a workload. For more information, see Microsoft Azure Well-Architected Framework.

Reliability

Reliability ensures your application can meet the commitments you make to your customers. For more information, see Overview of the reliability pillar.

Consider the following recommendations when you deploy this solution:

  • The solution uses Virtual Machine Scale Sets and a load balancer to distribute ingress traffic. This approach provides high availability even if a VM fails.
  • This solution supports multiple regions, data replication, and autoscaling. The networking components distribute traffic to the VMs. Health probes are used so that traffic is distributed only to healthy VMs.
  • All the networking components are fronted by Azure Front Door. This approach makes the networking resources and application resilient to issues that would otherwise disrupt traffic and affect end-user access.
  • Azure Front Door is a global service that supports virtual machine scale sets that are deployed in another region.
  • When you use Azure Front Door to cache all responses, you gain a small availability benefit. Specifically, when the origin doesn't respond, you can still access content. But caching doesn't provide a complete availability solution.
  • To increase availability, replicate Azure NetApp Files storage between paired regions. For more information, see Cross-region replication with Azure NetApp Files.
  • To increase Azure Database for MySQL availability, follow the high availability options that meet your needs.

Security

Security provides assurances against deliberate attacks and the abuse of your valuable data and systems. For more information, see Overview of the security pillar.

Consider the following recommendations when you deploy this solution:

  • Use Web Application Firewall on Azure Front Door to help protect the virtual network traffic that flows into the front-end application tier. For more information, see Azure Web Application Firewall on Azure Front Door.
  • Don't allow outbound internet traffic to flow from the database tier.
  • Don't allow public access to private storage.
  • Disable public access to resources where applicable. Use private endpoints for Azure Database for MySQL, Azure Cache for Redis, and Key Vault.

For more information about WordPress security, see General WordPress security and performance tips and Azure security documentation.

Cost optimization

Cost optimization is about looking at ways to reduce unnecessary expenses and improve operational efficiencies. For more information, see Overview of the cost optimization pillar.

Review the following cost considerations when you deploy this solution:

  • Traffic expectations (GB/month). Your traffic volume is the factor that has the greatest effect on your cost. The amount of traffic that you receive determines the number of VMs that you need and the price for outbound data transfer. The traffic volume also directly correlates with the amount of data that's provided by your content delivery network, where outbound data transfer costs are cheaper.
  • Amount of hosted data. It's important to consider the amount of data that you host, because Azure NetApp Files pricing is based on reserved capacity. To optimize costs, reserve the minimum capacity that you need for your data.
  • Write percentage. Consider how much new data you write to your website and the cost for storing it. For multi-region deployments, the amount of new data that you write to your website correlates with the amount of data that's mirrored across your regions.
  • Static versus dynamic content. Monitor your database storage performance and capacity to determine whether a cheaper SKU can support your site. The database stores dynamic content, and the content delivery network caches static content.
  • VM optimization. To optimize VM costs, follow general tips for VMs. For more information, see Cost optimization tips.

Performance efficiency

Performance efficiency is the ability of your workload to scale to meet the demands placed on it by users in an efficient manner. For more information, see Performance efficiency pillar overview.

This scenario uses Virtual Machine Scale Sets for the two front-end web server clusters in each region. With scale sets, the number of VM instances that run the front-end application tier can automatically scale in response to customer demand. The VMs can also scale based on a defined schedule. For more information, see Overview of autoscale with Virtual Machine Scale Sets.

Important

For best performance, it's essential to mount storage via NFS protocol version 4.1. The following bash example for Ubuntu shows you how to configure the vers option:

# Install an NFS driver and create a directory.
$ apt-get install -y nfs-common && mkdir -p /var/www/html
# Add auto-mount on startup. (Replace the following code with
# instructions from the Azure portal, but change the vers value to 4.1.)
$ echo '<netapp_private_ip>:/<volume_name> /var/www/html nfs rw,hard,rsize=262144,wsize=262144,sec=sys,vers=4.1,tcp 0 0' >> /etc/fstab
# Mount the storage.
$ mount -a

Contributors

This article is maintained by Microsoft. It was originally written by the following contributors.

Principal author:

Other contributors:

  • Adrian Calinescu | Senior Cloud Solution Architect

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Next steps

Product documentation:

Microsoft training modules: