Re: Azure API Management documentation
I have more information. After stumbling around and around the web Portal looking for anything related to documentation I noticed a *Developer portal* icon. The help indicates that this is the magic place where API documentation is managed, but clicking the Publish button does nothing. 15 minutes later I discover that the feature is not available on the consumption plan I chose. The Basic production plan is ~$200/month which WAY beyond our tolerance levels. Our API usage is so low that the consumption plan would have been ideal, but in a Catch-22 there is documentation available. Now I'll just delete the APIM feature and forget it. *GK*
Re: Azure API Management documentation
This is something that annoys me about Azure and its various plans. Discovering things missing that should be there or worse, were there but then go away. Rather than support everything at all levels, they add things that only work at higher paid tiers. Its even worse when you start dealing with MSDN subscriptions versus paid subscriptions. I found some regions could not deploy particular types of products (ie Azure database), despite me having old instances of said products already in that region. ie they change things and add more restrictions. I'm sure they also remove them. I'm sure there are often technical reasons (ie some Data Centers are missing required things to support products, but having things disappear from the supported list is annoying). I think they need to make some smaller instances etc that sit between the free stuff and the smallest paid option. For example a website on Azure can be free or it can be $39 a month. What about a dotnet core app that could be hosted on a linux vm for $5 a month? Last I looked there was no way to run a website for $5 a month on Azure unless you do it yourself on a linux vm. We're not all building websites with enterprise sized wallets. From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com on behalf of Greg Keogh Sent: Monday, 20 April 2020 12:32 PM To: ozDotNet Subject: Re: Azure API Management documentation I have more information. After stumbling around and around the web Portal looking for anything related to documentation I noticed a Developer portal icon. The help indicates that this is the magic place where API documentation is managed, but clicking the Publish button does nothing. 15 minutes later I discover that the feature is not available on the consumption plan I chose. The Basic production plan is ~$200/month which WAY beyond our tolerance levels. Our API usage is so low that the consumption plan would have been ideal, but in a Catch-22 there is documentation available. Now I'll just delete the APIM feature and forget it. GK
RE: Azure API Management documentation
I hear your frustration. I am about to “AWS lambda-ize” a dotnet core 3.1 website and do a side-by-side comparison with Azure. https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/compute/announcing-aws-lambda-supports-for-net-core-3-1/ With RDS On Demand https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonRDS/latest/UserGuide/USER_OnDemandDBInstances.html the price may not hit $5/mo but it could get close. Is anyone else doing that? (sorry if I am hijacking your conversation Stephen) But this is what is tipping me over the edge… https://serverfault.com/questions/992726/catastrophic-azure-app-service-outage-after-an-automatic-azure-platform-upgrade Regards David Apelt *From:* ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com *On Behalf Of *Stephen Price *Sent:* Monday, 20 April 2020 4:12 PM *To:* ozDotNet *Subject:* Re: Azure API Management documentation This is something that annoys me about Azure and its various plans. Discovering things missing that should be there or worse, were there but then go away. Rather than support everything at all levels, they add things that only work at higher paid tiers. Its even worse when you start dealing with MSDN subscriptions versus paid subscriptions. I found some regions could not deploy particular types of products (ie Azure database), despite me having old instances of said products already in that region. ie they change things and add more restrictions. I'm sure they also remove them. I'm sure there are often technical reasons (ie some Data Centers are missing required things to support products, but having things disappear from the supported list is annoying). I think they need to make some smaller instances etc that sit between the free stuff and the smallest paid option. For example a website on Azure can be free or it can be $39 a month. What about a dotnet core app that could be hosted on a linux vm for $5 a month? Last I looked there was no way to run a website for $5 a month on Azure unless you do it yourself on a linux vm. We're not all building websites with enterprise sized wallets. -- *From:* ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com on behalf of Greg Keogh *Sent:* Monday, 20 April 2020 12:32 PM *To:* ozDotNet *Subject:* Re: Azure API Management documentation I have more information. After stumbling around and around the web Portal looking for anything related to documentation I noticed a *Developer portal* icon. The help indicates that this is the magic place where API documentation is managed, but clicking the Publish button does nothing. 15 minutes later I discover that the feature is not available on the consumption plan I chose. The Basic production plan is ~$200/month which WAY beyond our tolerance levels. Our API usage is so low that the consumption plan would have been ideal, but in a Catch-22 there is documentation available. Now I'll just delete the APIM feature and forget it. *GK* -- Level 5, 143 Coronation Drive, Milton QLD 4064 | PO Box 1464, Milton QLD 4064 www.transmax.com.au <http://www.transmax.com.au> This e-mail and attachments may contain confidential or privileged information. If you are not the intended recipient,please notify the sender immediately by e-mail and then delete this message and attachments. In this instance, any distribution,copying, publication, or use of this information for any purpose is prohibited.
Re: Azure API Management documentation
> We're not all building websites with enterprise sized wallets. > Dead right! I often fall into the category between free plan (where things are missing) and the lowest-end plans which suddenly jump to $20-60/month, and a few of those really add-up and put a strain on the wallet. We've got a couple of 64-bit web apps running at the moment, and 64-bit is double the cost of 32-bit for some weird reason. One of my pending jobs is to get the 32-bit C++ DLL and try to downgrade to save money -- *GK*
RE: Azure API Management documentation
I'm not sure that $39/month or $5/month is "enterprise sized wallets" - I suspect most of us here cost that in an hour, let alone a month. From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com On Behalf Of Stephen Price Sent: Monday, 20 April 2020 4:12 PM To: ozDotNet Subject: Re: Azure API Management documentation This is something that annoys me about Azure and its various plans. Discovering things missing that should be there or worse, were there but then go away. Rather than support everything at all levels, they add things that only work at higher paid tiers. Its even worse when you start dealing with MSDN subscriptions versus paid subscriptions. I found some regions could not deploy particular types of products (ie Azure database), despite me having old instances of said products already in that region. ie they change things and add more restrictions. I'm sure they also remove them. I'm sure there are often technical reasons (ie some Data Centers are missing required things to support products, but having things disappear from the supported list is annoying). I think they need to make some smaller instances etc that sit between the free stuff and the smallest paid option. For example a website on Azure can be free or it can be $39 a month. What about a dotnet core app that could be hosted on a linux vm for $5 a month? Last I looked there was no way to run a website for $5 a month on Azure unless you do it yourself on a linux vm. We're not all building websites with enterprise sized wallets. From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com<mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com> mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com>> on behalf of Greg Keogh mailto:gfke...@gmail.com>> Sent: Monday, 20 April 2020 12:32 PM To: ozDotNet mailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com>> Subject: Re: Azure API Management documentation I have more information. After stumbling around and around the web Portal looking for anything related to documentation I noticed a Developer portal icon. The help indicates that this is the magic place where API documentation is managed, but clicking the Publish button does nothing. 15 minutes later I discover that the feature is not available on the consumption plan I chose. The Basic production plan is ~$200/month which WAY beyond our tolerance levels. Our API usage is so low that the consumption plan would have been ideal, but in a Catch-22 there is documentation available. Now I'll just delete the APIM feature and forget it. GK