Muokkaa

Jaa


App status in Azure Spring Apps

Note

The Basic, Standard, and Enterprise plans will be deprecated starting from mid-March, 2025, with a 3 year retirement period. We recommend transitioning to Azure Container Apps. For more information, see the Azure Spring Apps retirement announcement.

The Standard consumption and dedicated plan will be deprecated starting September 30, 2024, with a complete shutdown after six months. We recommend transitioning to Azure Container Apps. For more information, see Migrate Azure Spring Apps Standard consumption and dedicated plan to Azure Container Apps.

This article applies to: ✅ Java ✅ C#

This article applies to: ✅ Basic/Standard ✅ Enterprise

This article shows you how to view app status for Azure Spring Apps.

The Azure Spring Apps UI delivers information about the status of running applications. There's an Apps option for each resource group in a subscription that displays general status of application types. For each application type, there's a display of Application instances.

Apps status

To view general status of an application type, select Apps in the left navigation pane of a resource group to display the following status information of the deployed app:

  • Provisioning state: Shows the deployment's provisioning state.
  • Running instance: Shows how many app instances are running and how many app instances you desire. If you stop the app, this column shows stopped.
  • Registration status: Shows how many app instances are registered in service discovery and how many app instances you desire. If you stop the app, this column shows stopped.

Screenshot of the Azure portal that shows the Apps Settings page with specific columns highlighted.

Deployment status

The deployment status shows the running state of the deployment. The status is reported as one of the following values:

Value Definition
Running The deployment SHOULD be running.
Stopped The deployment SHOULD be stopped.

Provisioning status

The deployment provisioning status describes the state of operations of the deployment resource. This status shows the comparison between the functionality and the deployment definition.

The provisioning state is accessible only from the CLI. The status is reported as one of the following values:

Value Definition
Creating The resource is creating and isn't ready.
Updating The resource is updating and the functionality might be different from the deployment definition until the update is complete.
Succeeded Successfully supplied resources and deploys the binary. The deployment's functionality is the same as the definition and all app instances are working.
Failed Failed to achieve the Succeeded goal.
Deleting The resource is being deleted which prevents operation, and the resource isn't available in this status.

Registration status

The app registration status shows the state in service discovery. The Basic/Standard plan uses Eureka for service discovery. For more information on how the Eureka client calculates the state, see Eureka's health checks. The Enterprise pricing plan uses Tanzu Service Registry for service discovery.

App instances status

The app instance status represents every instance of the app. To view the status of a specific instance of a deployed app, select the App instance pane and then select the App Instance Name value for the app. The following status values appear:

  • Status: Indicates whether the instance is starting, running, terminating, or in failed state.
  • Discovery Status: The registered status of the app instance in the Eureka server or the Service Registry.

Screenshot of the Azure portal showing the App instance Settings page with the Status and Discovery status columns highlighted.

App instance status

The instance status is reported as one of the following values:

Value Definition
Starting The binary is successfully deployed to the given instance. The instance booting the jar file might fail because the jar can't run properly. Azure Spring Apps restarts the app instance in 60 seconds if it detects that the app instance is still in the Starting state.
Running The instance works. The instance can serve requests from inside Azure Spring Apps.
Failed The app instance failed to start the user's binary after several retries. The app instance might be in one of the following states:
- The app might stay in the Starting status and never be ready for serving requests.
- The app might boot up but crash in a few seconds.
Terminating The app instance is shutting down. The app might not serve requests and the app instance is removed.

App discovery status

The discovery status of the instance is reported as one of the following values:

Value Definition
UP The app instance is registered to Eureka and ready to receive traffic
OUT_OF_SERVICE The app instance is registered to Eureka and able to receive traffic. but shuts down for traffic intentionally.
DOWN The app instance is registered but not able to receive traffic.
UNREGISTERED The app instance isn't registered to Eureka.
N/A The app instance is running with custom container or service discovery is not enabled.

Next steps