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CloudBeaver Community deployment in Microsoft Azure
This guide explains how to deploy CloudBeaver Community on Microsoft Azure using the Azure Portal.
Before you begin, ensure you have a Microsoft Azure account for accessing Azure services.
Tip: If you don’t have an Azure account, sign up on the Azure signup page.
- Log in to the Azure Portal and search for Community images in the search bar.
- In the search bar on the left side under Community images, enter
cloudbeaver-ce
. Select the image for your region from the list and click Create VM.
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Project details:
- Subscription: Choose your Azure subscription.
- Resource group: Create a new group or select an existing one.
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Instance details:
- Virtual machine name: Set a unique name for the VM.
- Size: Choose a VM with at least 2 vCPUs and 4 GiB RAM.
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Administrator account:
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Username: Set to
ubuntu
. - SSH public key source: Generate a new key pair or use an existing one.
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Username: Set to
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Inbound port rules:
- Select inbound ports: Enable ports SSH (22), HTTP (80), and HTTPS (443).
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Double-check your configuration and click Review + Create to finalize.
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After the virtual machine is created, retrieve its public IP address:
- In the Azure Portal, go to Virtual Machines.
- Select your virtual machine.
- In the Overview section, find the Public IP address.
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Use this public IP address to start configuring and accessing the CloudBeaver interface.
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In your browser, go to
http://public-ip/
, where<public-ip>
is the public IP address of your Azure instance. -
You’ll be redirected to CloudBeaver’s initial configuration wizard to complete the setup.
Tip: For guidance on locating your instance's public IP address, see Azure: Find IP Address of a VM.
- Application overview
- Demo Server
- Administration
- Server configuration
- Create Connection
- Network configuration settings
- Connection Templates Management
- Access Management
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Authentication methods
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Local Access Authentication
- Anonymous Access Configuration
- Reverse proxy header authentication
- LDAP
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Single Sign On
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SAML
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OpenID
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AWS OpenID
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AWS SAML
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AWS IAM
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AWS OpenId via Okta
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Snowflake SSO
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Okta OpenId
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Cognito OpenId
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JWT authentication
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Kerberos authentication
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NTLM
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Microsoft Entra ID authentication
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Google authentication
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Local Access Authentication
- User credentials storage
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Cloud Explorer
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Cloud storage
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Query Manager
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Drivers Management
- Supported databases
- Accessibility
- Keyboard shortcuts
- Features
- Server configuration
- CloudBeaver and Nginx
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Domain manager
- Configuring HTTPS for Jetty server
- Command line parameters
- Local Preferences
- API
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CloudBeaver Community
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CloudBeaver AWS
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CloudBeaver Enterprise
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Deployment options
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Development