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Use Azure Marketplace image to create VM image for your Azure Stack Edge Pro GPU

APPLIES TO: Yes for Pro GPU SKUAzure Stack Edge Pro - GPUYes for Pro 2 SKUAzure Stack Edge Pro 2Yes for Pro R SKUAzure Stack Edge Pro RYes for Mini R SKUAzure Stack Edge Mini R                  

To deploy VMs on your Azure Stack Edge Pro GPU device, you need to create a VM image that you can use to create VMs. This article describes the steps that are required to create a VM image starting from an Azure Marketplace image. You can then use this VM image to deploy VMs on your Azure Stack Edge Pro GPU device.

VM image workflow

The following steps describe the VM image workflow using an Azure Marketplace workflow:

  1. Connect to the Azure Cloud Shell or a client with Azure CLI installed.
  2. Search the Azure Marketplace and identify your preferred image.
  3. Create a new managed disk from the Marketplace image.
  4. Export a VHD from the managed disk to Azure Storage account.
  5. Clean up the managed disk.

For more information, go to Deploy a VM on your Azure Stack Edge Pro device using Azure PowerShell.

Prerequisites

Before you can use Azure Marketplace images for Azure Stack Edge, make sure you're connected to Azure in either of the following ways.

Search for Azure Marketplace images

Identify a specific Azure Marketplace image that you wish to use. Azure Marketplace hosts thousands of VM images.

To find some of the most commonly used Marketplace images that match your search criteria, run the following command.

az vm image list --all [--publisher <Publisher>] [--offer <Offer>] [--sku <SKU>]

The last three flags are optional but excluding them returns a long list.

Some example queries are:

#Returns all images of type "Windows Server"
az vm image list --all --publisher "MicrosoftWindowsserver" --offer "WindowsServer"

#Returns all Windows Server 2019 Datacenter images from West US published by Microsoft
az vm image list --all --location "westus" --publisher "MicrosoftWindowsserver" --offer "WindowsServer" --sku "2019-Datacenter"

#Returns all VM images from a publisher
az vm image list --all --publisher "Canonical"

Here's an example output when VM images of a certain publisher, offer, and SKU were queried.

PS /home/user> az vm image list --all --publisher "Canonical" --offer "UbuntuServer" --sku "12.04.4-LTS"
[
  {
    "offer": "UbuntuServer",
    "publisher": "Canonical",
    "sku": "12.04.4-LTS",
    "urn": "Canonical:UbuntuServer:12.04.4-LTS:12.04.201402270",
    "version": "12.04.201402270"
  },
  {
    "offer": "UbuntuServer",
    "publisher": "Canonical",
    "sku": "12.04.4-LTS",
    "urn": "Canonical:UbuntuServer:12.04.4-LTS:12.04.201404080",
    "version": "12.04.201404080"
  },
  {
    "offer": "UbuntuServer",
    "publisher": "Canonical",
    "sku": "12.04.4-LTS",
    "urn": "Canonical:UbuntuServer:12.04.4-LTS:12.04.201404280",
    "version": "12.04.201404280"
  },
  {
    "offer": "UbuntuServer",
    "publisher": "Canonical",
    "sku": "12.04.4-LTS",
    "urn": "Canonical:UbuntuServer:12.04.4-LTS:12.04.201405140",
    "version": "12.04.201405140"
  },
  {
    "offer": "UbuntuServer",
    "publisher": "Canonical",
    "sku": "12.04.4-LTS",
    "urn": "Canonical:UbuntuServer:12.04.4-LTS:12.04.201406060",
    "version": "12.04.201406060"
  },
  {
    "offer": "UbuntuServer",
    "publisher": "Canonical",
    "sku": "12.04.4-LTS",
    "urn": "Canonical:UbuntuServer:12.04.4-LTS:12.04.201406190",
    "version": "12.04.201406190"
  },
  {
    "offer": "UbuntuServer",
    "publisher": "Canonical",
    "sku": "12.04.4-LTS",
    "urn": "Canonical:UbuntuServer:12.04.4-LTS:12.04.201407020",
    "version": "12.04.201407020"
  },
  {
    "offer": "UbuntuServer",
    "publisher": "Canonical",
    "sku": "12.04.4-LTS",
    "urn": "Canonical:UbuntuServer:12.04.4-LTS:12.04.201407170",
    "version": "12.04.201407170"
  }
]
PS /home/user>

In this example, we'll select Windows Server 2019 Datacenter Core, version 2019.0.20190410. We'll identify this image by its Universal Resource Number (“URN”).

List of marketplace images

Commonly used Marketplace images

Below is a list of URNs for some of the most commonly used images. If you just want the latest version of a particular OS, the version number can be replaced with "latest" in the URN. For example, “MicrosoftWindowsServer:WindowsServer:2019-Datacenter:Latest”.

OS SKU Version URN
Windows Server 2019 Datacenter 17763.1879.2104091832 MicrosoftWindowsServer:WindowsServer:2019-Datacenter:17763.1879.2104091832
Windows Server 2019 Datacenter (30-GB small disk) 17763.1879.2104091832 MicrosoftWindowsServer:WindowsServer:2019-Datacenter-smalldisk:17763.1879.2104091832
Windows Server 2019 Datacenter Core 17763.1879.2104091832 MicrosoftWindowsServer:WindowsServer:2019-Datacenter-Core:17763.1879.2104091832
Windows Server 2019 Datacenter Core (30-GB small disk) 17763.1879.2104091832 MicrosoftWindowsServer:WindowsServer:2019-Datacenter-Core-smalldisk:17763.1879.2104091832
Windows Desktop Windows 10 20H2 Pro 19042.928.2104091209 MicrosoftWindowsDesktop:Windows-10:20h2-pro:19042.928.2104091209
Ubuntu Server Canonical Ubuntu Server 18.04 LTS 18.04.202002180 Canonical:UbuntuServer:18.04-LTS:18.04.202002180
Ubuntu Server Canonical Ubuntu Server 16.04 LTS 16.04.202104160 Canonical:UbuntuServer:16.04-LTS:16.04.202104160

Create a new managed disk from the Marketplace image

Create an Azure Managed Disk from your chosen Marketplace image.

  1. Set some parameters.

    $urn = <URN of the Marketplace image> #Example: “MicrosoftWindowsServer:WindowsServer:2019-Datacenter:Latest”
    $diskName = <disk name> #Name for new disk to be created
    $diskRG = <resource group> #Resource group that contains the new disk
    
  2. Create the disk and generate a SAS access URL.

    az disk create -g $diskRG -n $diskName --image-reference $urn
    $sas = az disk grant-access --duration-in-seconds 36000 --access-level Read --name $diskName --resource-group $diskRG
    $diskAccessSAS = ($sas | ConvertFrom-Json)[0].accessSas
    

Here's an example output:

PS /home/user> $urn = “MicrosoftWindowsServer:WindowsServer:2019-Datacenter:Latest”
PS /home/user> $diskName = "newmanageddisk1"
PS /home/user> $diskRG = "newrgmd1"
PS /home/user> az disk create -g $diskRG -n $diskName --image-reference $urn
{
  "burstingEnabled": null,
  "creationData": {
    "createOption": "FromImage",
    "galleryImageReference": null,
    "imageReference": {
      "id": "/Subscriptions/db4e2fdb-6d80-4e6e-b7cd-736098270664/Providers/Microsoft.Compute/Locations/eastus/Publishers/MicrosoftWindowsServer/ArtifactTypes/VMImage/Offers/WindowsServer/Skus/2019-Datacenter/Versions/17763.1935.2105080716",
      "lun": null
    },
    "logicalSectorSize": null,
    "sourceResourceId": null,
    "sourceUniqueId": null,
    "sourceUri": null,
    "storageAccountId": null,
    "uploadSizeBytes": null
  },
  "diskAccessId": null,
  "diskIopsReadOnly": null,
  "diskIopsReadWrite": 500,
  "diskMBpsReadOnly": null,
  "diskMBpsReadWrite": 100,
  "diskSizeBytes": 136367308800,
  "diskSizeGb": 127,
  "diskState": "Unattached",
  "encryption": {
    "diskEncryptionSetId": null,
    "type": "EncryptionAtRestWithPlatformKey"
  },
  "encryptionSettingsCollection": null,
  "extendedLocation": null,
  "hyperVGeneration": "V1",
  "id": "/subscriptions/db4e2fdb-6d80-4e6e-b7cd-736098270664/resourceGroups/newrgmd1/providers/Microsoft.Compute/disks/NewManagedDisk1",
  "location": "eastus",
  "managedBy": null,
  "managedByExtended": null,
  "maxShares": null,
  "name": "NewManagedDisk1",
  "networkAccessPolicy": "AllowAll",
  "osType": "Windows",
  "propertyUpdatesInProgress": null,
  "provisioningState": "Succeeded",
  "purchasePlan": null,
  "resourceGroup": "newrgmd1",
  "securityProfile": null,
  "shareInfo": null,
  "sku": {
    "name": "Premium_LRS",
    "tier": "Premium"
  },
  "supportsHibernation": null,
  "tags": {},
  "tier": "P10",
  "timeCreated": "2021-06-08T00:39:34.205982+00:00",
  "type": "Microsoft.Compute/disks",
  "uniqueId": "1a649ad4-3b95-471e-89ef-1d2ed1f51525",
  "zones": null
}

PS /home/user> $sas = az disk grant-access --duration-in-seconds 36000 --access-level Read --name $diskName --resource-group $diskRG
PS /home/user>  $diskAccessSAS = ($sas | ConvertFrom-Json)[0].accessSas
PS /home/user>

Export a VHD from the managed disk to Azure Storage

This step exports a VHD from the managed disk to your preferred Azure blob storage account. This VHD can then be used to create VM images on Azure Stack Edge.

  1. Set the destination storage account where the VHD is copied.

    $storageAccountName = <destination storage account name>
    $containerName = <destination container name>
    $destBlobName = <blobname.vhd> #Blob that will be created, including .vhd extension
    $storageAccountKey = <storage account key>
    
  2. Copy the VHD to the destination storage account.

    $destContext = New-AzureStorageContext -StorageAccountName $storageAccountName -StorageAccountKey $storageAccountKey
    Start-AzureStorageBlobCopy -AbsoluteUri $diskAccessSAS -DestContainer $containerName -DestContext $destContext -DestBlob $destBlobName
    

    The VHD copy takes several minutes to complete. Ensure the copy completes before proceeding by running the following command. The status field shows “Success” when complete.

    Get-AzureStorageBlobCopyState –Container $containerName –Context $destContext -Blob $destBlobName
    

Here's an example output:

PS /home/user> $storageAccountName = "edgeazurevmeus"
PS /home/user> $containerName = "azurevmmp"
PS /home/user> $destBlobName = "newblobmp.vhd"
PS /home/user> $storageAccountKey = "n9sCytWLdTBz0F4Sco9SkPGWp6BJBtf7BJBk79msf1PfxJGQdqSfu6TboZWZ10xyZdc4y+Att08cC9B79jB0YA=="

PS /home/user> $destContext = New-AzureStorageContext -StorageAccountName $storageAccountName -StorageAccountKey $storageAccountKey
PS /home/user> Start-AzureStorageBlobCopy -AbsoluteUri $diskAccessSAS -DestContainer $containerName -DestContext $destContext -DestBlob $destBlobName

   AccountName: edgeazurevmeus, ContainerName: azurevmmp

Name                 BlobType  Length          ContentType                    LastModified         AccessTier SnapshotTime                 IsDeleted  VersionId
----                 --------  ------          -----------                    ------------         ---------- ------------                 ---------  ---------
newblobmp.vhd        PageBlob  -1                                             2021-06-08 00:50:10Z                                         False

PS /home/user> Get-AzureStorageBlobCopyState –Container $containerName –Context $destContext -Blob $destBlobName

CopyId                  : 24a1e3f5-886a-490d-9dd7-562bb4acff58
CompletionTime          :
Status                  : Pending
Source                  : https://md-lfn221fppr2c.blob.core.windows.net/d4tb2hp5ff2q/abcd?sv=2018-03-28&sr=b&si=4f588db1-9aac-44d9-9607-35497cc08a7f
BytesCopied             : 696254464
TotalBytes              : 136367309312
StatusDescription       :
DestinationSnapshotTime :

PS /home/user> Get-AzureStorageBlobCopyState –Container $containerName –Context $destContext -Blob $destBlobName

CopyId                  : 24a1e3f5-886a-490d-9dd7-562bb4acff58
CompletionTime          : 6/8/2021 12:57:26 AM +00:00
Status                  : Success
Source                  : https://md-lfn221fppr2c.blob.core.windows.net/d4tb2hp5ff2q/abcd?sv=2018-03-28&sr=b&si=4f588db1-9aac-44d9-9607-35497cc08a7f
BytesCopied             : 136367309312
TotalBytes              : 136367309312
StatusDescription       :
DestinationSnapshotTime :

Clean up the managed disk

To delete the managed disk you created, follow these steps:

az disk revoke-access --name $diskName --resource-group $diskRG
az disk delete --name $diskName --resource-group $diskRG --yes

The deletion takes a couple minutes to complete.

Next steps

Deploy VMs on your Azure Stack Edge Pro GPU device.