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Network requirements

Windows 365 is a cloud-based service that lets users connect through the internet from any device, from any place, to a Windows Desktop running in Azure. To support these internet connections, you must follow the networking requirements listed in this article.

Each customer has its specific requirements based on the workload they use to calculate the network requirements of their Cloud PC environment.

Note

This article only applies if you plan on provisioning Cloud PCs on your own Azure virtual network, as opposed to a Microsoft-hosted network.

General network requirements

To use your own network and provision Microsoft Entra joined Cloud PCs, you must meet the following requirements:

  • Azure virtual network: You must have a virtual network (vNET) in your Azure subscription in the same region as where the Windows 365 desktops are created.
  • Network bandwidth: See Azure’s Network guidelines.
  • A subnet within the vNet and available IP address space.

To use your own network and provision Microsoft Entra hybrid joined Cloud PCs, you must meet the above requirements, and the following requirements:

  • The Azure virtual network must be able to resolve DNS entries for your Active Directory Domain Services (AD DS) environment. To support this resolution, define your AD DS DNS servers as the DNS servers for the virtual network.
  • The Azure vNet must have network access to an enterprise domain controller, either in Azure or on-premises.

Allow network connectivity

You must allow traffic in your network configuration to the following service URLs and ports to support provisioning and management of Cloud PCs and for remote connectivity with Cloud PCs. Although most of the configuration is for the Cloud PC network, end user connectivity occurs from a physical device. Therefore, you must also follow the connectivity guidelines on the physical device network.

Device or service Network connectivity required URLs and ports Notes
Physical device Link For Remote Desktop client connectivity and updates.
Microsoft Intune service Link For Intune cloud services like device management, application delivery, and endpoint analytics.
Azure Virtual Desktop session host virtual machine Link For remote connectivity between Cloud PCs and the backend Azure Virtual Desktop service.
Windows 365 service Link For provisioning and health checks.

Windows 365 service

The following URLs and ports are required for the provisioning of Cloud PCs and the Azure Network Connection (ANC) health checks:

  • *.infra.windows365.microsoft.com
  • *.cmdagent.trafficmanager.net
  • Registration endpoints
    • login.microsoftonline.com
    • login.live.com
    • enterpriseregistration.windows.net
    • global.azure-devices-provisioning.net (443 & 5671 outbound)
    • hm-iot-in-prod-prap01.azure-devices.net (443 & 5671 outbound)
    • hm-iot-in-prod-prau01.azure-devices.net (443 & 5671 outbound)
    • hm-iot-in-prod-preu01.azure-devices.net (443 & 5671 outbound)
    • hm-iot-in-prod-prna01.azure-devices.net (443 & 5671 outbound)
    • hm-iot-in-prod-prna02.azure-devices.net (443 & 5671 outbound)
    • hm-iot-in-2-prod-preu01.azure-devices.net (443 & 5671 outbound)
    • hm-iot-in-2-prod-prna01.azure-devices.net (443 & 5671 outbound)
    • hm-iot-in-3-prod-preu01.azure-devices.net (443 & 5671 outbound)
    • hm-iot-in-3-prod-prna01.azure-devices.net (443 & 5671 outbound)
    • hm-iot-in-4-prod-prna01.azure-devices.net (443 & 5671 outbound)

All endpoints connect over port 443 unless otherwise specified.

Port 3389

Port 3389 is disabled by default for all newly provisioned Cloud PCs. Microsoft recommends that you keep port 3389 closed. However, if you need port 3389 to be open for any reprovisioned or newly provisioned Cloud PCs using the Azure Network Connection (ANC) deployment option, you can review the following options:

  • Windows 365 Security Baselines. Customers can use the Windows 365 Security Baselines to effectively manage port 3389 for Windows 365 Cloud PCs. These baselines provide comprehensive tools and configurations designed to enhance security measures while allowing necessary access. By adjusting Firewall Settings and setting the Default Inbound Action for Public Profile to Allow, organizations can make sure that port 3389 is appropriately configured to meet operational needs. Review and customize these settings according to your specific organizational requirements.
  • Create a custom Firewall rule in Microsoft Intune. Customers can use custom Firewall rules in Microsoft Intune to configure port 3389 for Windows 365 Cloud PCs. This option involves creating a custom rule within Intune's security policies tailored to allow inbound traffic on port 3389, which is used for access to Cloud PCs. By defining the rule parameters such as port number, protocol (TCP), and restricting specific IP addresses or networks, you can make sure that access to port 3389 is tightly controlled and limited to authorized entities only.

These options aren't applicable for customers using a Microsoft-hosted network.

Use FQDN tags for endpoints through Azure Firewall

Windows 365 fully qualified domain name (FQDN) tags make it easier to grant access to Windows 365 required service endpoints through an Azure firewall. For more information, see Use Azure Firewall to manage and secure Windows 365 environments.

Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) broker service endpoints

Direct connectivity to Azure Virtual Desktop RDP broker service endpoints is critical for remoting performance to a Cloud PC. These endpoints affect both connectivity and latency. To align with the Microsoft 365 network connectivity principles, you should categorize these endpoints as Optimize endpoints. We recommend that you use a direct path from your Azure virtual network to those endpoints.

To make it easier to configure network security controls, use Azure Virtual Desktop service tags to identity those endpoints for direct routing using an Azure Networking User Defined Route (UDR). A UDR results in direct routing between your virtual network and the RDP broker for lowest latency. For more information about Azure Service Tags, see Azure service tags overview.

Changing the network routes of a Cloud PC (at the network layer or at the Cloud PC layer like VPN) might break the connection between the Cloud PC and the Azure Virtual Desktop RDP broker. If so, the end user is disconnected from their Cloud PC until a connection be re-established.

DNS requirements

As part of the Microsoft Entra hybrid join requirements, your Cloud PCs must be able to join on-premises Active Directory. That requires that the Cloud PCs be able to resolve DNS records for your on-premises AD environment.

Configure your Azure Virtual Network where the Cloud PCs are provisioned as follows:

  1. Make sure that your Azure Virtual Network has network connectivity to DNS servers that can resolve your Active Directory domain.
  2. From the Azure Virtual Network's Settings, select DNS Servers and then choose Custom.
  3. Enter the IP address of DNS servers that environment that can resolve your AD DS domain.

Tip

Adding at least two DNS servers, as you would with a physical PC, helps mitigate the risk of a single point of failure in name resolution.

For more information, see configuring Azure Virtual Networks settings.

Remote Desktop Protocol requirements

Windows 365 uses the Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP).

Scenario Default mode H.264/AVC 444 mode Description
Idle 0.3 Kbps 0.3 Kbps User paused their work and there are no active screen updates.
Microsoft Word 100-150 Kbps 200-300 Kbps User is actively working with Microsoft Word: typing, pasting graphics, and switching between documents.
Microsoft Excel 150-200 Kbps 400-500 Kbps User is actively working with Microsoft Excel: multiple cells with formulas and charts are updated simultaneously
Microsoft PowerPoint 4-4.5 Mbps 1.6-1.8 Mbps User is actively working with Microsoft PowerPoint: typing, pasting, modifying rich graphics, and using slide transition effects.
Web Browsing 6-6.5 Mbps 0.9-1 Mbps User is actively working with a graphically rich website that contains multiple static and animated images. User scrolls the pages both horizontally and vertically
Image Gallery 3.3-3.6 Mbps 0.7-0.8 Mbps User is actively working with the image gallery application: browsing, zooming, resizing, and rotating images
Video playback 8.5-9.5 Mbps 2.5-2.8 Mbps User is watching a 30 FPS video that consumes 1/2 of the screen.
Fullscreen Video playback 7.5-8.5 Mbps 2.5-3.1 Mbps User is watching a 30 FPS video maximized to a full screen.

Microsoft Teams requirements

Microsoft Teams is one of the core Microsoft 365 services within Cloud PC. Windows 365 offloads the audio and video traffic to your endpoint to make the video experience like Teams on a physical PC.

The network quality is important per scenario. Make sure that you have the proper bandwidth available for the quality that you want to offer.

Full HD (1920x1080p) isn’t a supported resolution for Microsoft Teams on Cloud PCs.

Bandwidth (up/down) Scenarios
30 kbps Peer-to-peer audio calling.
130 kbps Peer-to-peer audio calling and screen sharing.
500 kbps Peer-to-peer quality video calling 360p at 30 fps.
1.2 Mbps Peer-to-peer HD quality video calling with resolution of HD 720p at 30 fps.
500kbps/1Mbps Group Video calling.

For more information on Microsoft Teams networking requirements, see Networking considerations.

Traffic interception technologies

Some enterprise customers use traffic interception, SSL decryption, deep packet inspection, and other similar technologies for security teams to monitor network traffic. Cloud PC provisioning may need direct access to the virtual machine. These traffic interception technologies can cause issues with running Azure network connection checks or Cloud PC provisioning. Make sure no network interception is enforced for Cloud PCs provisioned within the Windows 365 service.

Bandwidth

Windows 365 uses the Azure network infrastructure. An Azure subscription is required when a virtual network is selected while deploying Windows 365 Enterprise. Bandwidth charges for Cloud PC usage include:

  • Network traffic into a Cloud PC is free.
  • Outbound (egress) traffic incurs charges against the Azure subscription for the virtual network.
  • Office data (like email and OneDrive for Business file sync) incurs egress charges if the Cloud PC and a user’s data reside in different regions.
  • RDP networking traffic always incurs egress charges.

If you bring your own network, see Bandwidth pricing.

If you use a Microsoft-hosted network: Outbound data/month is based on the RAM of the Cloud PC:
- 2-GB RAM = 12-GB outbound data
- 4-GB or 8-GB RAM = 20-GB outbound data
- 16-GB RAM = 40-GB outbound data
- 32-GB RAM = 70-GB outbound data
Data bandwidth may be restricted when these levels are exceeded.

Next steps

Learn about Cloud PC role-based access control.