Complete Azure Network Watcher DEMO and Overview

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Complete Azure Network Watcher Demo and Overview
Complete Azure Network Watcher
Complete Azure Network Watcher Network Watcher Pricing
Complete Azure Network Watcher Extension DEMO
Complete Azure Network Watcher Topology DEMO
Complete Azure Network Watcher Connection Monitor DEMO
Complete Azure Network Watcher Connection Troubleshoot DEMO
Complete Azure Network Watcher IP Flow Verify DEMO
Complete Azure Network Watcher Flow Logs DEMO
Complete Azure Network Watcher Traffic Analytics DEMO
Complete Azure Network Watcher tools DEMO

Azure Network Watcher provides tools to monitor, diagnose, view metrics, and enable or disable logs for resources in an Azure virtual network. Network Watcher is designed to monitor and repair the network health of IaaS (Infrastructure-as-a-Service) products which includes Virtual Machines, Virtual Networks, Application Gateways, Load balancers, etc. Note: It is not intended for and will not work for PaaS monitoring or Web analytics.

Network Watcher
Monitor, diagnose and gain insights to your network performance and health
Automate remote network monitoring with packet capture
Monitor and diagnose networking issues without logging in to your virtual machines (VMs) using Network Watcher. Trigger packet capture by setting alerts and gain access to real-time performance information at the packet level. When you see an issue, you can investigate in detail for better diagnoses.

Gain insight into your network traffic using flow logs
Build a deeper understanding of your network traffic pattern using Network Security Group flow logs. Information provided by flow logs helps you gather data for compliance, auditing and monitoring your network security profile.
Diagnose VPN connectivity issues
Network Watcher provides you the ability to diagnose your most common VPN Gateway and Connections issues. Allowing you, not only, to identify the issue but also to use the detailed logs created to help further investigate.

Monitoring - Endpoints can be another virtual machine (VM), a fully qualified domain name (FQDN), a uniform resource identifier (URI), or IPv4 address. The connection monitor capability monitors communication at a regular interval and informs you of reachability, latency, and network topology changes between the VM and the endpoint. For example, you might have a web server VM that communicates with a database server VM. Someone in your organization may, unknown to you, apply a custom route or network security rule to the web server or database server VM or subnet.
Connection monitor also provides the minimum, average, and maximum latency observed over time. After learning the latency for a connection, you may find that you're able to decrease the latency by moving your Azure resources to different Azure regions. Learn more about determining relative latencies between Azure regions and internet service providers and how to monitor communication between a VM and an endpoint with connection monitor. If you'd rather test a connection at a point in time, rather than monitor the connection over time, like you do with connection monitor, use the connection troubleshoot capability.

Network performance monitor is a cloud-based hybrid network monitoring solution that helps you monitor network performance between various points in your network infrastructure. It also helps you monitor network connectivity to service and application endpoints and monitor the performance of Azure ExpressRoute. Network performance monitor detects network issues like traffic blackholing, routing errors, and issues that conventional network monitoring methods aren't able to detect. The solution generates alerts and notifies you when a threshold is breached for a network link. It also ensures timely detection of network performance issues and localizes the source of the problem to a particular network segment or device

View resources in a virtual network and their relationships
As resources are added to a virtual network, it can become difficult to understand what resources are in a virtual network and how they relate to each other. The topology capability enables you to generate a visual diagram of the resources in a virtual network, and the relationships between the resources. The following picture shows an example topology diagram for a virtual network that has three subnets, two VMs, network interfaces, public IP addresses, network security groups, route tables, and the relationships between the resources:

You can Diagnose network traffic filtering problems to or from a VM

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