Azure and Bicep
(How to create Azure resources using bicep files) In this video I demonstrate how you can create resources using bicep files instead of json files. I also demonstrate how you can convert a JSON file to a bicep file. Using bicep files is really great for managing azure resources. *using bicep files in azure *create a storage account with bicep and powershell *decompile JSON to bicep *param in bicep file *Automation azure *azure automation *azure bicep *azure json *transpile json to bicep *powershell *learn powershell *automation *learn automation *windows *windows powershell *automatic deployment *automatic installations *configuration as code Code df : var location = resourceGroup().location param tag2 string = 'value2-default' resource mydf 'Microsoft.DataFactory/factories@2018-06-01' = { name: 'myaf' location: location tags: { tag1: 'value1' tag2: tag2 } } Code storage accounts: param tag2 string = 'value2-default' param stname string = 'mrb2411' var sku = 'Standard_LRS' var kind = 'StorageV2' resource mystorageacc 'Microsoft.Storage/storageAccounts@2021-04-01' = { name: stname location: resourceGroup().location tags:{ tag1: 'value1' tag2: tag2 } sku: { name: sku } kind: kind } Powershell wrapper for account creation: for ($i =0; $i -lt 10; $i++){ New-AzResourceGroupDeployment -TemplateFile part.bicep ` -stname "mrb2412$i" -tag2 "overwrited value $i" } Export resourcegroup to JSON Export-AzResourceGroup -ResourceGroupName "name_rg" deploy a bicep : New-AzResourceGroupDeployment -TemplateFile .\df.bicep decompile: bicep decompile filepath.json
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