Muokkaa

Jaa


Manage health probes for Azure Load Balancer using the Azure portal

Azure Load Balancer uses health probes to monitor the health of backend instances. In this article, you learn how to manage health probes for Azure Load Balancer.

There are three types of health probes:

Standard SKU Basic SKU
Probe types TCP, HTTP, HTTPS TCP, HTTP
Probe down behavior All probes down, all TCP flows continue. All probes down, all TCP flows expire.

Health probes have the following properties:

Health Probe configuration Details
Name Name of the health probe. This is a name you get to define for your health probe
Protocol Protocol of health probe. This is the protocol type you would like the health probe to use. Available options are: TCP, HTTP, HTTPS
Port Port of the health probe. The destination port you would like the health probe to use when it connects to the virtual machine to check the virtual machine's health status. You must ensure that the virtual machine is also listening on this port (that is, the port is open).
Interval (seconds) Interval of health probe. The amount of time (in seconds) between consecutive health check attempts to the virtual machine
Used by The list of load balancer rules using this specific health probe. You should have at least one rule using the health probe for it to be effective
Path The URI used for requesting health status from the virtual machine instance by the health probe (only applicable for HTTPs probes).

Important

Load Balancer health probes originate from the IP address 168.63.129.16 and must not be blocked for probes to mark your instance as up. To see this probe traffic within your backend instance, review the Azure Load Balancer FAQ.

Regardless of configured time-out threshold, HTTP(S) load balancer health probes will automatically mark the instance as down if the server returns any status code that isn't HTTP 200 OK or if the connection is terminated via TCP reset.

Prerequisites

TCP health probe

In this section, you learn how to add and remove a TCP health probe. A public load balancer is used in the examples.

Add a TCP health probe

In this example, you create a TCP health probe to monitor port 80.

  1. Sign in to the Azure portal.

  2. In the search box at the top of the portal, enter Load balancer. Select Load balancers in the search results.

  3. Select myLoadBalancer or your load balancer.

  4. In the load balancer page, select Health probes in Settings.

  5. Select + Add in Health probes to add a probe.

  6. Enter or select the following information in Add health probe.

    Setting Value
    Name Enter myHealthProbe.
    Protocol Select TCP.
    Port Enter the TCP port you wish to monitor. For this example, it's port 80.
    Interval Enter an interval between probe checks. For this example, it's the default of 5.
  7. Select Add.

Remove a TCP health probe

In this example, you remove a TCP health probe.

  1. Sign in to the Azure portal.

  2. In the search box at the top of the portal, enter Load balancer. Select Load balancers in the search results.

  3. Select myLoadBalancer or your load balancer.

  4. In the load balancer page, select Health probes in Settings.

  5. Select the three dots next to the rule you want to remove.

  6. Select Delete.

HTTP health probe

In this section, you learn how to add and remove an HTTP health probe. A public load balancer is used in the examples.

Add an HTTP health probe

In this example, you create an HTTP health probe.

  1. Sign in to the Azure portal.

  2. In the search box at the top of the portal, enter Load balancer. Select Load balancers in the search results.

  3. Select myLoadBalancer or your load balancer.

  4. In the load balancer page, select Health probes in Settings.

  5. Select + Add in Health probes to add a probe.

  6. Enter or select the following information in Add health probe.

    Setting Value
    Name Enter myHealthProbe.
    Protocol Select HTTP.
    Port Enter the TCP port you wish to monitor. For this example, it's port 80.
    Path Enter a URI used for requesting health status. For this example, it's /.
    Interval Enter an interval between probe checks. For this example, it's the default of 5.
  7. Select Add.

Remove an HTTP health probe

In this example, you remove an HTTP health probe.

  1. Sign in to the Azure portal.

  2. In the search box at the top of the portal, enter Load balancer. Select Load balancers in the search results.

  3. Select myLoadBalancer or your load balancer.

  4. In the load balancer page, select Health probes in Settings.

  5. Select the three dots next to the rule you want to remove.

  6. Select Delete.

HTTPS health probe

In this section, you learn how to add and remove an HTTPS health probe. A public load balancer is used in the examples.

Add an HTTPS health probe

In this example, you create an HTTPS health probe.

  1. Sign in to the Azure portal.

  2. In the search box at the top of the portal, enter Load balancer. Select Load balancers in the search results.

  3. Select myLoadBalancer or your load balancer.

  4. In the load balancer page, select Health probes in Settings.

  5. Select + Add in Health probes to add a probe.

  6. Enter or select the following information in Add health probe.

    Setting Value
    Name Enter myHealthProbe.
    Protocol Select HTTPS.
    Port Enter the TCP port you wish to monitor. For this example, it's port 443.
    Path Enter a URI used for requesting health status. For this example, it's /.
    Interval Enter an interval between probe checks. For this example, it's the default of 5.
  7. Select Add.

Remove an HTTPS health probe

In this example, you remove an HTTPS health probe.

  1. Sign in to the Azure portal.

  2. In the search box at the top of the portal, enter Load balancer. Select Load balancers in the search results.

  3. Select myLoadBalancer or your load balancer.

  4. In the load balancer page, select Health probes in Settings.

  5. Select the three dots next to the rule you want to remove.

  6. Select Delete.

Next steps

In this article, you learned how to manage health probes for an Azure Load Balancer.

For more information about Azure Load Balancer, see: