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Tutorial: Connect to Virtual Machine Scale Set instances using Azure PowerShell

A Virtual Machine Scale Set allows you to deploy and manage a set of virtual machines. Throughout the lifecycle of a Virtual Machine Scale Set, you may need to run one or more management tasks. In this tutorial you learn how to:

  • List connection information
  • Connect to individual instances using Remote Desktop Connection

If you don't have an Azure subscription, create a free account before you begin.

Azure Cloud Shell

Azure hosts Azure Cloud Shell, an interactive shell environment that you can use through your browser. You can use either Bash or PowerShell with Cloud Shell to work with Azure services. You can use the Cloud Shell preinstalled commands to run the code in this article, without having to install anything on your local environment.

To start Azure Cloud Shell:

Option Example/Link
Select Try It in the upper-right corner of a code or command block. Selecting Try It doesn't automatically copy the code or command to Cloud Shell. Screenshot that shows an example of Try It for Azure Cloud Shell.
Go to https://shell.azure.com, or select the Launch Cloud Shell button to open Cloud Shell in your browser. Button to launch Azure Cloud Shell.
Select the Cloud Shell button on the menu bar at the upper right in the Azure portal. Screenshot that shows the Cloud Shell button in the Azure portal

To use Azure Cloud Shell:

  1. Start Cloud Shell.

  2. Select the Copy button on a code block (or command block) to copy the code or command.

  3. Paste the code or command into the Cloud Shell session by selecting Ctrl+Shift+V on Windows and Linux, or by selecting Cmd+Shift+V on macOS.

  4. Select Enter to run the code or command.

List instances in a scale set

If you don't have a scale set already created, see Tutorial: Create and manage a Virtual Machine Scale Set with Azure PowerShell.

List all the instances in your Virtual Machine Scale Set using Get-AzVM.

Get-AzVM -ResourceGroup myResourceGroup
ResourceGroupName Name                  Location    VmSize             OsType    NIC 
----------------- ----                  --------    ------             ------    --- 
myResourceGroup   myScaleSet_Instance1   eastus     Standard_DS1_v2    Windows    myScaleSet-instance1-nic      
myResourceGroup   myScaleSet_Instance2   eastus     Standard_DS1_v2    Windows    myScaleSet-instance2-nic    

Get NIC information

Using the NIC name, get the private IP address of the NIC, the backend address pool name and load balancer name with Get-AzNetworkInterface.

Get-AzNetworkInterface -Name myScaleSet-instance1-nic
Name                        : myScaleSet-instance1-nic
ResourceGroupName           : myResourceGroup
Location                    : eastus
Id                          : /subscriptions//resourceGroups/myResourceGroup/providers/Microsoft.Network/networkInterfaces/myScaleSet-instance1-nic
ProvisioningState           : Succeeded
Tags                        : 
VirtualMachine              : {
                                "Id": "/subscriptions//resourceGroups/myResourceGroup/providers/Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines/myScaleSet_Instance1"
                              }
IpConfigurations            : [
                                {
                                  "Name": "myScaleSet",
                              "/subscriptions//resourceGroups/myResourceGroup/providers/Microsoft.Network/networkInterfaces/myScaleSet-instance1-nic/ipConfigurations/myScaleSet",
                                  "PrivateIpAddress": "192.168.1.5",
                                  "PrivateIpAllocationMethod": "Dynamic",
                                  "Subnet": {
                                    "Id": "/subscriptions//resourceGroups/myResourceGroup/providers/Microsoft.Network/virtualNetworks/myScaleSet/subnets/myScaleSet",
                                    "IpAllocations": []
                                  },
                                  "ProvisioningState": "Succeeded",
                                  "PrivateIpAddressVersion": "IPv4",
                                  "LoadBalancerBackendAddressPools": [
                                    {
                                      "Id": 
                              40.88.43.135"/subscriptions//resourceGroups/myResourceGroup/providers/Microsoft.Network/loadBalancers/myScaleSet/backendAddressPools/myScaleSet",
                                      "LoadBalancerBackendAddresses": []
                                    }
                                  ],
                                  "LoadBalancerInboundNatRules": [],
                                  "Primary": true,
                                  "ApplicationGatewayBackendAddressPools": [],
                                  "ApplicationSecurityGroups": [],
                                  "VirtualNetworkTaps": []
                                }
                              ]

Get backend pool details

Using the backend pool name, load balancer name and private IP address, get the port for associated with private IP address of the instance you want to connect to using Get-AzLoadBalancerBackendAddressInboundNatRulePortMapping.

Get-AzLoadBalancerBackendAddressInboundNatRulePortMapping `
  -ResourceGroupName myResourceGroup `
  -LoadBalancerName myScaleSet `
  -Name myScaleSet `
  -IpAddress 192.168.1.5

If you run the above command and find your load balancer doesn't have any inbound NAT rules, you can add inbound NAT rules using Add-AzLoadBalancerInboundNatRuleConfig. Once complete, run Get-AzLoadBalancerBackendAddressInboundNatRulePortMapping again.

$slb = Get-AzLoadBalancer -Name "myScaleSet" -ResourceGroupName "MyResourceGroup"
$slb | Add-AzLoadBalancerInboundNatRuleConfig -Name "myNatRule" -FrontendIPConfiguration $slb.FrontendIpConfigurations[0] -Protocol "Tcp" -IdleTimeoutInMinutes 10 -FrontendPortRangeStart 50000 -FrontendPortRangeEnd 50099 -BackendAddressPool $slb.BackendAddressPools[0] -BackendPort 3389
$slb | Set-AzLoadBalancer
InboundNatRuleName : myNatRule
Protocol           : Tcp
FrontendPort       : 50001
BackendPort        : 3389

Get public IP of load balancer

Get the public IP of the load balancer using GetAzPublicIpAddress.

Get-AzPublicIpAddress -ResourceGroup myResourceGroup    
Name                     : myScaleSet
ResourceGroupName        : myResourceGroup
Location                 : eastus
Id                       : /subscriptions/resourceGroups/myResourceGroup/providers/Microsoft.Network/publicIPAddresses/myScaleSet
ProvisioningState        : Succeeded
PublicIpAllocationMethod : Static
IpAddress                : 40.88.43.135
PublicIpAddressVersion   : IPv4
IdleTimeoutInMinutes     : 4
IpConfiguration          : {
                             "Id": "/subscriptions//resourceGroups/myResourceGroup/providers/Microsoft.Network/loadBalancers/myScaleSet/frontendIPConfigurations/myScaleSet"
                           }
DnsSettings              : {
                             "DomainNameLabel": "myscaleset-Instance1",
                             "Fqdn": "myscaleset-Instance1.eastus.cloudapp.azure.com"
                           }
Zones                    : {}
Sku                      : {
                             "Name": "Standard",
                             "Tier": "Regional"
                           }

Connect to your instance

Remote Desktop to your machine using the Public IP address of the load balancer and the Port mapping to the machine instance you want to connect to.

Screenshot of remote desktop application from Windows machine.

Next steps

In this tutorial, you learned how to list the instances in your scale set and connect via SSH to an individual instance.

  • List and view instances in a scale set
  • Gather networking information for individual instances in a scale set
  • Connect to individual VM instances inside a scale set