I've recently been running a few Kubernetes lab scenarios in Azure.
Usually I try to set such things up via Azure Powershell.
However this has been a learning experience of the feature disparity between Azure Powershell and Azure CLI.
I've recently been running a few Kubernetes lab scenarios in Azure.
Usually I try to set such things up via Azure Powershell.
However this has been a learning experience of the feature disparity between Azure Powershell and Azure CLI.
Following from the prior post discussing Azure security and networking, I felt that additional coverage of Azure Network Security Groups was needed, as it is not the most obvious topic (and the design is quite different from how AWS does it).
I'd recently renewed my Azure Network Engineer certification, and it's good to see how much of the syllabus is still highly relevant from a cloud security angle. From a certain perspective, it's a stepping stone to the Azure Security Engineer certification (AZ-500), and a good check for useful knowledge.
Recently I completed the course materials for CloudBreach's "Breaching Azure" and took the lab exam, obtaining their "Offensive Azure Security Professional" (OASP) certification. Microsoft's Azure and security certifications focus on building and defending cloud services, not trying to bypass defenses, making this certification quite different.