Azure web app - Additional deployment slots affect production slot? Azure deployment slots and database migrations. Custom deployment slots in Azure cloud. It is possible to have a single production database shared by staging and production Azure App Service slots, and still having zero-downtime deployments. To do this, you need to ensure that all your migrations are backwards compatible, such that the current and new versions of the web app can run simultaneously with the same database. Web App with custom Deployment slots This template provides an easy way to deploy a web app with custom deployment slots on Azure Web Apps. Is this page helpful? In this video of the Azure Portal “How To” Series, you will learn how to set up staging environments in Azure App Service by using deployment slots. This template provides an easy way to deploy a web app with custom deployment slots on Azure Web Apps. This Azure Resource Manager (ARM) template was created by a member of the community and not by Microsoft.
With this years Azure Advent Calendar I made some site improvements and also upgraded the site from .Net 2.2 to 3.0, the code built and ran locally just fine, I push it to production and boom! – sites down, not good for a number of reasons.
The take away from this is I knew better, I tried to push some changes which in hindsight could easy have broken the site and by running it locally I thought its all good, the site has no tests as its content only.
By upgrading the site and attempting to add in Azure Application configuration I ran into some nuget package issues which I though I had resolved.
Get to the point of the blog post already Gregor!
Azure has a thing called Azure Deployment Slots for Web apps and with this feature we can have the following: –
That’s the short version of what deployment slots are used for, I encourage you to take a look at them and I have this now setup for the azure advent calendar and wont be so careless next time.
When you deploy your web app, web app on Linux, mobile back end, or API app to Azure App Service, you can use a separate deployment slot instead of the default production slot when you're running in the Standard, Premium, or Isolated App Service plan tier. Deployment slots are live apps with their own host names. App content and configurations elements can be swapped between two deployment slots, including the production slot.
Deploying your application to a non-production slot has the following benefits:
Each App Service plan tier supports a different number of deployment slots. There's no additional charge for using deployment slots. To find out the number of slots your app's tier supports, see App Service limits.
To scale your app to a different tier, make sure that the target tier supports the number of slots your app already uses. For example, if your app has more than five slots, you can't scale it down to the Standard tier, because the Standard tier supports only five deployment slots.
The app must be running in the Standard, Premium, or Isolated tier in order for you to enable multiple deployment slots.
in the Azure portal, search for and select App Services and select your app.
In the left pane, select Deployment slots > Add Slot.
Note
If the app isn't already in the Standard, Premium, or Isolated tier, you receive a message that indicates the supported tiers for enabling staged publishing. At this point, you have the option to select Upgrade and go to the Scale tab of your app before continuing.
In the Add a slot dialog box, give the slot a name, and select whether to clone an app configuration from another deployment slot. Select Add to continue.
You can clone a configuration from any existing slot. Settings that can be cloned include app settings, connection strings, language framework versions, web sockets, HTTP version, and platform bitness.
After the slot is added, select Close to close the dialog box. The new slot is now shown on the Deployment slots page. By default, Traffic % is set to 0 for the new slot, with all customer traffic routed to the production slot.
Select the new deployment slot to open that slot's resource page.
The staging slot has a management page just like any other App Service app. You can change the slot's configuration. To remind you that you're viewing the deployment slot, the app name is shown as <app-name>/<slot-name>, and the app type is App Service (Slot). You can also see the slot as a separate app in your resource group, with the same designations.
Select the app URL on the slot's resource page. The deployment slot has its own host name and is also a live app. To limit public access to the deployment slot, see Azure App Service IP restrictions.
The new deployment slot has no content, even if you clone the settings from a different slot. For example, you can publish to this slot with Git. You can deploy to the slot from a different repository branch or a different repository.
When you swap two slots (usually from a staging slot into the production slot), App Service does the following to ensure that the target slot doesn't experience downtime:
Apply the following settings from the target slot (for example, the production slot) to all instances of the source slot:
Any of these cases trigger all instances in the source slot to restart. During swap with preview, this marks the end of the first phase. The swap operation is paused, and you can validate that the source slot works correctly with the target slot's settings.
Wait for every instance in the source slot to complete its restart. If any instance fails to restart, the swap operation reverts all changes to the source slot and stops the operation.
If local cache is enabled, trigger local cache initialization by making an HTTP request to the application root ('/') on each instance of the source slot. Wait until each instance returns any HTTP response. Local cache initialization causes another restart on each instance.
If auto swap is enabled with custom warm-up, trigger Application Initiation by making an HTTP request to the application root ('/') on each instance of the source slot.
If applicationInitialization
isn't specified, trigger an HTTP request to the application root of the source slot on each instance.
If an instance returns any HTTP response, it's considered to be warmed up.
If all instances on the source slot are warmed up successfully, swap the two slots by switching the routing rules for the two slots. After this step, the target slot (for example, the production slot) has the app that's previously warmed up in the source slot.
Now that the source slot has the pre-swap app previously in the target slot, perform the same operation by applying all settings and restarting the instances.
At any point of the swap operation, all work of initializing the swapped apps happens on the source slot. The target slot remains online while the source slot is being prepared and warmed up, regardless of where the swap succeeds or fails. To swap a staging slot with the production slot, make sure that the production slot is always the target slot. This way, the swap operation doesn't affect your production app.
When you clone configuration from another deployment slot, the cloned configuration is editable. Some configuration elements follow the content across a swap (not slot specific), whereas other configuration elements stay in the same slot after a swap (slot specific). The following lists show the settings that change when you swap slots.
Settings that are swapped:
Features marked with an asterisk (*) are planned to be unswapped.
Settings that aren't swapped:
Note
Certain app settings that apply to unswapped settings are also not swapped. For example, since diagnostic settings are not swapped, related app settings like WEBSITE_HTTPLOGGING_RETENTION_DAYS
and DIAGNOSTICS_AZUREBLOBRETENTIONDAYS
are also not swapped, even if they don't show up as slot settings.
To configure an app setting or connection string to stick to a specific slot (not swapped), go to the Configuration page for that slot. Add or edit a setting, and then select deployment slot setting. Selecting this check box tells App Service that the setting is not swappable.
You can swap deployment slots on your app's Deployment slots page and the Overview page. For technical details on the slot swap, see What happens during swap.
Important
Before you swap an app from a deployment slot into production, make sure that production is your target slot and that all settings in the source slot are configured exactly as you want to have them in production.
To swap deployment slots:
Go to your app's Deployment slots page and select Swap.
The Swap dialog box shows settings in the selected source and target slots that will be changed.
Select the desired Source and Target slots. Usually, the target is the production slot. Also, select the Source Changes and Target Changes tabs and verify that the configuration changes are expected. When you're finished, you can swap the slots immediately by selecting Swap.
To see how your target slot would run with the new settings before the swap actually happens, don't select Swap, but follow the instructions in Swap with preview.
When you're finished, close the dialog box by selecting Close.
If you have any problems, see Troubleshoot swaps.
Before you swap into production as the target slot, validate that the app runs with the swapped settings. The source slot is also warmed up before the swap completion, which is desirable for mission-critical applications.
When you perform a swap with preview, App Service performs the same swap operation but pauses after the first step. You can then verify the result on the staging slot before completing the swap.
If you cancel the swap, App Service reapplies configuration elements to the source slot.
To swap with preview:
Follow the steps in Swap deployment slots but select Perform swap with preview.
The dialog box shows you how the configuration in the source slot changes in phase 1, and how the source and target slot change in phase 2.
When you're ready to start the swap, select Start Swap.
When phase 1 finishes, you're notified in the dialog box. Preview the swap in the source slot by going to https://<app_name>-<source-slot-name>.azurewebsites.net
.
When you're ready to complete the pending swap, select Complete Swap in Swap action and select Complete Swap.
To cancel a pending swap, select Cancel Swap instead.
When you're finished, close the dialog box by selecting Close.
If you have any problems, see Troubleshoot swaps.
To automate a multi-phase swap, see Automate with PowerShell.
If any errors occur in the target slot (for example, the production slot) after a slot swap, restore the slots to their pre-swap states by swapping the same two slots immediately.
Note
Auto swap isn't supported in web apps on Linux.
Auto swap streamlines Azure DevOps scenarios where you want to deploy your app continuously with zero cold starts and zero downtime for customers of the app. When auto swap is enabled from a slot into production, every time you push your code changes to that slot, App Service automatically swaps the app into production after it's warmed up in the source slot.
Note
Before you configure auto swap for the production slot, consider testing auto swap on a non-production target slot.
To configure auto swap:
Go to your app's resource page. Select Deployment slots > <desired source slot> > Configuration > General settings.
For Auto swap enabled, select On. Then select the desired target slot for Auto swap deployment slot, and select Save on the command bar.
Execute a code push to the source slot. Auto swap happens after a short time, and the update is reflected at your target slot's URL.
If you have any problems, see Troubleshoot swaps.
Some apps might require custom warm-up actions before the swap. The applicationInitialization
configuration element in web.config lets you specify custom initialization actions. The swap operation waits for this custom warm-up to finish before swapping with the target slot. Here's a sample web.config fragment.
For more information on customizing the applicationInitialization
element, see Most common deployment slot swap failures and how to fix them.
You can also customize the warm-up behavior with one or both of the following app settings:
WEBSITE_SWAP_WARMUP_PING_PATH
: The path to ping to warm up your site. Add this app setting by specifying a custom path that begins with a slash as the value. An example is /statuscheck
. The default value is /
.WEBSITE_SWAP_WARMUP_PING_STATUSES
: Valid HTTP response codes for the warm-up operation. Add this app setting with a comma-separated list of HTTP codes. An example is 200,202
. If the returned status code isn't in the list, the warmup and swap operations are stopped. By default, all response codes are valid.Note
The <applicationInitialization>
configuration element is part of each app start-up, whereas the two warm-up behavior app settings apply only to slot swaps.
If you have any problems, see Troubleshoot swaps.
If the swap operation takes a long time to complete, you can get information on the swap operation in the activity log.
On your app's resource page in the portal, in the left pane, select Activity log.
A swap operation appears in the log query as Swap Web App Slots
. You can expand it and select one of the suboperations or errors to see the details.
By default, all client requests to the app's production URL (http://<app_name>.azurewebsites.net
) are routed to the production slot. You can route a portion of the traffic to another slot. This feature is useful if you need user feedback for a new update, but you're not ready to release it to production.
To route production traffic automatically:
Go to your app's resource page and select Deployment slots.
In the Traffic % column of the slot you want to route to, specify a percentage (between 0 and 100) to represent the amount of total traffic you want to route. Select Save.
After the setting is saved, the specified percentage of clients is randomly routed to the non-production slot.
After a client is automatically routed to a specific slot, it's 'pinned' to that slot for the life of that client session. On the client browser, you can see which slot your session is pinned to by looking at the x-ms-routing-name
cookie in your HTTP headers. A request that's routed to the 'staging' slot has the cookie x-ms-routing-name=staging
. A request that's routed to the production slot has the cookie x-ms-routing-name=self
.
Note
Next to the Azure portal, you can also use the az webapp traffic-routing set
command in the Azure CLI to set the routing percentages from CI/CD tools like DevOps pipelines or other automation systems.
In addition to automatic traffic routing, App Service can route requests to a specific slot. This is useful when you want your users to be able to opt in to or opt out of your beta app. To route production traffic manually, you use the x-ms-routing-name
query parameter.
To let users opt out of your beta app, for example, you can put this link on your webpage:
The string x-ms-routing-name=self
specifies the production slot. After the client browser accesses the link, it's redirected to the production slot. Every subsequent request has the x-ms-routing-name=self
cookie that pins the session to the production slot.
To let users opt in to your beta app, set the same query parameter to the name of the non-production slot. Here's an example:
By default, new slots are given a routing rule of 0%
, shown in grey. When you explicitly set this value to 0%
(shown in black text), your users can access the staging slot manually by using the x-ms-routing-name
query parameter. But they won't be routed to the slot automatically because the routing percentage is set to 0. This is an advanced scenario where you can 'hide' your staging slot from the public while allowing internal teams to test changes on the slot.
Search for and select your app. Select Deployment slots > <slot to delete> > Overview. The app type is shown as App Service (Slot) to remind you that you're viewing a deployment slot. Select Delete on the command bar.
Note
This article has been updated to use the new Azure PowerShell Azmodule. You can still use the AzureRM module, which will continue to receive bug fixes until at least December 2020.To learn more about the new Az module and AzureRM compatibility, seeIntroducing the new Azure PowerShell Az module. ForAz module installation instructions, see Install Azure PowerShell.
Azure PowerShell is a module that provides cmdlets to manage Azure through Windows PowerShell, including support for managing deployment slots in Azure App Service.
For information on installing and configuring Azure PowerShell, and on authenticating Azure PowerShell with your Azure subscription, see How to install and configure Microsoft Azure PowerShell.
Azure Resource Manager templates are declarative JSON files used to automate the deployment and configuration of Azure resources. To swap slots by using Resource Manager templates, you will set two properties on the Microsoft.Web/sites/slots and Microsoft.Web/sites resources:
buildVersion
: this is a string property which represents the current version of the app deployed in the slot. For example: 'v1', '1.0.0.1', or '2019-09-20T11:53:25.2887393-07:00'.targetBuildVersion
: this is a string property that specifies what buildVersion
the slot should have. If the targetBuildVersion does not equal the current buildVersion
, then this will trigger the swap operation by finding the slot which has the specified buildVersion
.The following Resource Manager template will update the buildVersion
of the staging slot and set the targetBuildVersion
on the production slot. This will swap the two slots. The template assumes you already have a webapp created with a slot named 'staging'.
This Resource Manager template is idempotent, meaning that it can be executed repeatedly and produce the same state of the slots. After the first execution, targetBuildVersion
will match the current buildVersion
, so a swap will not be triggered.
For Azure CLI commands for deployment slots, see az webapp deployment slot.
If any error occurs during a slot swap, it's logged in D:homeLogFileseventlog.xml. It's also logged in the application-specific error log.
Here are some common swap errors:
An HTTP request to the application root is timed. The swap operation waits for 90 seconds for each HTTP request, and retries up to 5 times. If all retries are timed out, the swap operation is stopped.
Local cache initialization might fail when the app content exceeds the local disk quota specified for the local cache. For more information, see Local cache overview.
During custom warm-up, the HTTP requests are made internally (without going through the external URL). They can fail with certain URL rewrite rules in Web.config. For example, rules for redirecting domain names or enforcing HTTPS can prevent warm-up requests from reaching the app code. To work around this issue, modify your rewrite rules by adding the following two conditions:
Without a custom warm-up, the URL rewrite rules can still block HTTP requests. To work around this issue, modify your rewrite rules by adding the following condition:
After slot swaps, the app may experience unexpected restarts. This is because after a swap, the hostname binding configuration goes out of sync, which by itself doesn't cause restarts. However, certain underlying storage events (such as storage volume failovers) may detect these discrepancies and force all worker processes to restart. To minimize these types of restarts, set the WEBSITE_ADD_SITENAME_BINDINGS_IN_APPHOST_CONFIG=1
app setting on all slots. However, this app setting does not work with Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) apps.