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How to list the Azure VMs from the Availability set using PowerShell?

Chirag Nagrekar
Chirag Nagrekar
Updated on 02-Sep-2021 636 Views

To list the Azure VMs under the availability set, we can use the command as shown belowBefore running the command make sure that you are connected to the Azure Cloud (if not use ConnectAzAccount) and proper azure subscription (Set-AzContext to set the Azure subscription)$availabilitySetVMs = Get-AzAvailabilitySet -ResourceGroupName MYRESOURCEGROUPAVAILABILITY -Name myAvailabilitySetTo get the total number of Virtual machines in the availability set, PS C:\> $availabilitySetVMs.VirtualMachinesReferences.id.countOutputTo get all the VM names from the list, we can use the below command.$VMlist = Get-AzAvailabilitySet -ResourceGroupName MYRESOURCEGROUPAVAILABILITY -Name myAvailabilitySet $i=0 foreach($vm in $VMlist.VirtualMachinesReferences){    "VM{0}: {1}" -f $i, ($vm.Id.Split('/'))[-1]    $i++ }Output

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How to get the fault domain count of the Azure Availability set using PowerShell?

Chirag Nagrekar
Chirag Nagrekar
Updated on 02-Sep-2021 265 Views

The fault domain in the Azure Availability set describes the VMs in the availability set that share the common Power, Storage, network switch, etc. If there is a failure in the fault domain then all the resources in the fault domain will become unavailable.Before running the command make sure that you are connected to the Azure Cloud (if not use ConnectAzAccount) and proper azure subscription (Set-AzContext to set the Azure subscription)$availablityset = Get-AzAvailabilitySet -ResourceGroupName ResourceGroupName -Name AvailabilitySetNameTo get the Fault domain countm$availablityset.PlatformFaultDomainCountOutput

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How to open port for the Azure VM using Azure CLI in PowerShell?

Chirag Nagrekar
Chirag Nagrekar
Updated on 02-Sep-2021 2K+ Views

To open the specific port for the Azure VM using Azure CLI, we can use az vm open-port command. Before running this command, make sure that you are connected with the Azure Cloud account and the proper Azure subscription.To open port 80 we can use the below command.az vm open-port -n Win2k16VM1 -g testvmrg --port 80The above command will open port 80 on the VM win2k16vm1 and the resource group testvmrg.To open the port with the highest priority, you can add the --priority parameteraz vm open-port -n Win2k16VM1 -g testvmrg --port 80 --priority 100To open the port range, az vm open-port ...

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How to list the azure VM extensions using Azure CLI in PowerShell?

Chirag Nagrekar
Chirag Nagrekar
Updated on 02-Sep-2021 1K+ Views

To list all the azure VM extensions using Azure CLI, we can use the “az vm extension” command.Before running this command make sure you are connected with the Azure cloud account and the Azure subscription. Once we run the command for the extension we need to provide the VM name and the resource group name as shown below.PS C:\> az vm extension list --vm-name Win2k16VM1 -g TESTVMRGThe output will be in the JSON format, we can use the parameter -otable to get the output in the table format.PS C:\> az vm extension list --vm-name Win2k16VM1 -g TESTVMRG -otableOutput

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How to get all the available azure VM images using Azure CLI in PowerShell?

Chirag Nagrekar
Chirag Nagrekar
Updated on 02-Sep-2021 2K+ Views

To get all the available azure VM images using Azure CLI, you can use the command az vm image.The below command will retrieve all the available azure images in the marketplace.PS C:\> az vm image list --allThe above command will take some time to retrieve the output. To get the output into the table format, use the below command.PS C:\> az vm image list --all -otableTo retrieve the images from the particular location, use the -l or --location parameter.PS C:\> az vm image list -l eastus -otableOutputTo get the VM images from the specific publisher, PS C:\> az vm image ...

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How to restart the Azure VM using Azure CLI in PowerShell?

Chirag Nagrekar
Chirag Nagrekar
Updated on 02-Sep-2021 3K+ Views

To restart the Azure VM using PowerShell, we can use the az vm restart command. This command requires the Azure VM in the running status. You also require to connect to the Azure cloud account and the proper azure subscription before running this command.Let assume our VM win2k16vm1 is currently on. We need to restart this VM. Here, -n is the VM name, and -g is the resource group name.PS C:\> az vm restart -n vmname -g RGname --verboseYou can also provide the full parameter name as shown below.PS C:\> az vm restart --name win2k16vm1 --resource-group testvmrgIf the VM is unresponsive, ...

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How to stop the Azure VM using Azure CLI in PowerShell?

Chirag Nagrekar
Chirag Nagrekar
Updated on 02-Sep-2021 4K+ Views

To stop the azure VM using Azure CLI we can use the az vm stop command. Before running this command make sure that you are connected to the Azure account and the proper Azure subscription.When we run this command, we need to provide the Azure VM name (-n) and the resource group name (-g).PS C:\> az vm stop -n Win2k16VM1 -g TESTVMRG --verboseThe above command will stop the Azure VM Win2k16VM1 from the resource group TestVMRG. Alternatively, you can also use the full parameter name as shown below.PS C:\> az vm stop --name win2k16vm1 --resource-group testvmrgThis command will wait until ...

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How to start the Azure VM using Azure CLI in PowerShell?

Chirag Nagrekar
Chirag Nagrekar
Updated on 02-Sep-2021 1K+ Views

To start the stopped Azure VM using Az CLI, we can use the az vm start command. Before starting the azure VM, make sure that you are connected to the desired subscription and the Azure cloud account.To start the specific VM, we will use the command below.PS C:\> az vm start -n vmname -g RGname --verboseOr you can use,PS C:\> az vm start --name vmname --resource-group RGName --verboseWhen you start the multiple VMs, you can specify the “--no-wait” parameter.PS C:\> az vm start -n vmname -g RGname –no-wait

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How to deallocate the Azure VM using Azure CLI in PowerShell?

Chirag Nagrekar
Chirag Nagrekar
Updated on 02-Sep-2021 3K+ Views

To deallocate the Azure VM using Azure CLI, we need to use the VM deallocation command az vm deallocate and need to provide the name of the VM and the resource group of the VM.Before running the deallocation command, make sure that you are connected to the proper azure subscription and the azure account.PS C:\> az vm deallocate -n VMName -g RGName --verboseOr you can usePS C:\> az vm deallocate --name VMName --resource-group RGName --verboseIf you are working on the multiple VMs, you can also apply the --no-wait parameter to continue next operation without waiting for the VM to stop.PS C:\> ...

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How to connect to SSH using PowerShell?

Chirag Nagrekar
Chirag Nagrekar
Updated on 02-Sep-2021 8K+ Views

It is possible to connect the non-windows target machines with the PowerShell using the SSH command in PowerShell. For that, you need to use the below format.ssh username@servernameThe below example shows how we can connect the non-windows target machine.PS C:\> ssh ansible@192.168.0.104OutputOnce you run this command the first time for any new server the setting will be added to the path .ssh/known_hosts in the user profile.

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