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Quickstart: Provision an Azure Spring Apps Standard consumption and dedicated plan service instance

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: ✅ Standard consumption and dedicated (Preview) ❎ Basic/Standard ❎ Enterprise

This article describes how to create a Standard consumption and dedicated plan in Azure Spring Apps for application deployment.

Prerequisites

  • An Azure subscription. If you don't have a subscription, create a free account before you begin.
  • (Optional) Azure CLI version 2.45.0 or higher. Use the following command to install the Azure Spring Apps extension: az extension add --name spring

Provision a Standard consumption and dedicated plan instance

You can use either the Azure portal or the Azure CLI to create a Standard consumption and dedicated plan.

Important

The Consumption workload profile has a pay-as-you-go billing model, with no starting cost. You're billed for the dedicated workload profile based on the provisioned resources. For more information, see Workload profiles in Consumption + Dedicated plan structure environments in Azure Container Apps (preview) and Azure Spring Apps pricing.

Use the following steps to create an instance of Azure Spring Apps using the Azure portal.

  1. Open the Azure portal.

  2. In the search box, search for Azure Spring Apps, and then select Azure Spring Apps from the results.

  3. On the Azure Spring Apps page, select Create.

    Screenshot of the Azure portal showing the Azure Spring Apps resource with the Create button highlighted.

  4. Fill out the Basics form on the Azure Spring Apps Create page using the following guidelines:

    • Project Details

      • Subscription: Select the subscription you want to be billed for this resource.
      • Resource group: Select an existing resource group or create a new one.
    • Service Details

      • Name: Create the name for the Azure Spring Apps service instance. The name must be between 4 and 32 characters long and can contain only lowercase letters, numbers, and hyphens. The first character of the service name must be a letter and the last character must be either a letter or a number.
      • Location: Currently, only the following regions are supported: Australia East, Central US, East US, East US 2, West Europe, East Asia, North Europe, South Central US, UK South, West US 3.
    • Plan: Select Standard Consumption and dedicated for the Pricing tier option.

    • App Environment

      • Select Create new to create a new Azure Container Apps environment, or select an existing environment from the dropdown menu.

        Screenshot of the Azure portal showing the Azure Spring Apps Create page.

  5. Fill out the Basics form on the Create Container Apps environment page. Use the default value asa-standard-consumption-app-env for the Environment name and choose Consumption and Dedicated workload profiles for the Plan.

    Screenshot of the Azure portal that shows the Create Container Apps environment page with the Consumption and Dedicated workload profiles selected.

  6. At this point, you've created an Azure Container Apps environment with a default standard consumption workload profile. If you wish to add a dedicated workload profile to the same Azure Container Apps environment, you can select the Workload profiles tab and select Add workload profile.

    Screenshot of the Azure portal showing the Create Workload Profiles tab.

  7. Select Review and create.

  8. On the Azure Spring Apps Create page, select Review and Create to finish creating the Azure Spring Apps instance.

Note

Optionally, you can also create an Azure Container Apps environment with your own virtual network. For more information, see Quickstart: Create an Azure Spring Apps instance in an Azure Container Apps environment with a virtual network.

Clean up resources

Be sure to delete the resources you created in this article when you no longer need them. To delete the resources, just delete the resource group that contains them. You can delete the resource group using the Azure portal. Alternatively, to delete the resource group by using Azure CLI, use the following commands:

echo "Enter the Resource Group name:" &&
read resourceGroupName &&
az group delete --name $resourceGroupName &&
echo "Press [ENTER] to continue ..."

Next steps