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Differences between Azure Stack Hub and Azure when using services and building apps

Before you use services or build apps for Azure Stack Hub, it's important to understand the differences between Azure Stack Hub and global Azure. This article identifies different features and key considerations when using Azure Stack Hub as your hybrid cloud development environment.

Overview

Azure Stack Hub is a hybrid cloud platform that enables you to use Azure services from your company or service provider datacenter. You can build an app on Azure Stack Hub and then deploy it to Azure Stack Hub, to Azure, or to your Azure hybrid cloud.

Your Azure Stack Hub operator tells you which services are available for you to use, and how to get support. They offer these services through their customized plans and offers.

The Azure technical documentation content assumes that apps are being developed for an Azure service and not for Azure Stack Hub. When you build and deploy apps to Azure Stack Hub, you must understand some key differences, such as:

  • Azure Stack Hub delivers a subset of the services and features that are available in Azure.
  • Your company or service provider can choose which services they want to offer. The available options might include customized services or applications. They may offer their own customized documentation.
  • Use the correct Azure Stack Hub-specific endpoints (for example, the URLs for the portal address and the Azure Resource Manager endpoint).
  • You must use PowerShell and API versions that are supported by Azure Stack Hub. Using supported versions ensures that your apps work in both Azure Stack Hub and Azure.

High-level differences

The following table describes the high-level differences between Azure Stack Hub and global Azure. Note these differences when you develop for Azure Stack Hub or use Azure Stack Hub services:

Area Azure (global) Azure Stack Hub
Who operates it? Microsoft Your organization or service provider.
Who do you contact for support? Microsoft For an integrated system, contact your Azure Stack Hub operator (at your organization or service provider) for support.

For Azure Stack Development Kit (ASDK) support, visit the Microsoft forums. Because the development kit is an evaluation environment, there's no official support offered through Microsoft Support.
Available services See the list of Azure services. Available services vary by Azure region. Azure Stack Hub supports a subset of Azure services. Actual services will vary based on what your organization or service provider chooses to offer.
Azure Resource Manager endpoint* https://management.azure.com For an Azure Stack Hub integrated system, use the endpoint that your Azure Stack Hub operator provides.

For the ASDK, use: https://management.local.azurestack.external.
Portal URL* https://portal.azure.com For an Azure Stack Hub integrated system, use the URL that your Azure Stack Hub operator provides.

For the ASDK, use: https://portal.local.azurestack.external.
Region You can select which region you want to deploy to. For an Azure Stack Hub integrated system, use the region that's available on your system.

For the Azure Stack Development Kit (ASDK), the region is always local.
Resource groups A resource group can span regions. For both integrated systems and the development kit, there's only one region.
Supported namespaces, resource types, and API versions The latest (or earlier versions that aren't yet deprecated). Azure Stack Hub supports specific versions. See the Version requirements section of this article.

*If you're an Azure Stack Hub operator, for more information see Using the administrator portal and Administration basics.

Helpful tools and best practices

Microsoft provides tools and guidance that help you develop for Azure Stack Hub.

Recommendation References
Install the correct tools on your developer workstation. - Install PowerShell
- Download tools
- Configure PowerShell
- Install Visual Studio
Review information about the following items:
- Azure Resource Manager template considerations.
- How to find quickstart templates.
- Use a policy module to help you use Azure to develop for Azure Stack Hub.
Develop for Azure Stack Hub
Review and follow the best practices for templates. Resource Manager Quickstart Templates

Version requirements

Azure Stack Hub supports specific versions of Azure PowerShell and Azure service APIs. Use supported versions to ensure that your app can deploy to both Azure Stack Hub and to global Azure.

To make sure that you use a correct version of Azure PowerShell, use API version profiles. To determine the latest API version profile that you can use, determine the build of Azure Stack Hub you're using. You can get this information from your Azure Stack Hub administrator.

Note

If you're using the Azure Stack Development Kit, and you have administrative access, see the Determine the current version section to determine the Azure Stack Hub build.

For other APIs, run the following PowerShell command to output the namespaces, resource types, and API versions that are supported in your Azure Stack Hub subscription. There may still be differences at a property level. For this command to work, you must have already installed and configured PowerShell for an Azure Stack Hub environment. You must also have a subscription to an Azure Stack Hub offer.

Get-AzResourceProvider | Select ProviderNamespace -Expand ResourceTypes | Select * -Expand ApiVersions | `
Select ProviderNamespace, ResourceTypeName, @{Name="ApiVersion"; Expression={$_}} 

Example output (truncated): Example output of Get-AzResourceProvider command

Next steps

For more detailed information about differences at a service level, see: