Architecture

Azure Bastion is deployed to a virtual network and supports virtual network peering. Specifically, Azure Bastion manages RDP/SSH connectivity to VMs created in the local or peered virtual networks.

RDP and SSH are some of the fundamental means through which you can connect to your workloads running in Azure. Exposing RDP/SSH ports over the Internet isn't desired and is seen as a significant threat surface. This is often due to protocol vulnerabilities. To contain this threat surface, you can deploy bastion hosts (also known as jump-servers) at the public side of your perimeter network. Bastion host servers are designed and configured to withstand attacks. Bastion servers also provide RDP and SSH connectivity to the workloads sitting behind the bastion, as well as further inside the network.

Currently, by default, new Bastion deployments don't support zone redundancies. Previously deployed bastions might or might not be zone-redundant. The exceptions are Bastion deployments in Korea Central and Southeast Asia, which do support zone redundancies.

  • The Bastion host is deployed in the virtual network that contains the AzureBastionSubnet subnet that has a minimum /26 prefix.
  • The user connects to the Azure portal using any HTML5 browser.
  • The user selects the virtual machine to connect to.
  • With a single click, the RDP/SSH session opens in the browser.
  • No public IP is required on the Azure VM.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Azure built-in roles for tables

Explore Dataflows Gen2 in Microsoft Fabric

Select and configure an appropriate method for access to Azure Blobs