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Cloud services represent a huge leap in functionality, performance, and management simplicity for web apps, APIs, mobile backends, and more. To help you get started with cloud-based development in Visual Studio for Mac, today we’re publishing two new hands-on labs: publishing your ASP.NET Core web app to Azure, and connecting your ASP.NET Core web app to Azure SQL Database.
These two labs will help develop cloud-ready ASP.NET web apps and APIs with Visual Studio for Mac, using an Azure hosted SQL database, and then publish the web app itself to Azure. What’s more, you can try Azure out for free!
Lab 7: Publishing ASP.NET Core websites to Azure
This lab builds on the earlier Getting Started with ASP.NET Core lab, by showing you how to publish the website to Azure using Visual Studio for Mac in just a few steps:
- Creating an Azure account
- Creating an ASP.NET Core website
- Publishing to Azure
- Managing your website in Azure
To complete the lab, follow these instructions which will guide you through the process.
Lab 8: Using Azure SQL Database in ASP.NET Core web apps
Every website needs a database. It is easy to set up an Azure SQL database to connect and develop locally on Visual Studio for Mac and migrate it to a production instance later. This lab will walk you through getting your first cloud database and ASP.NET Core web app up and running:
- Creating an Azure SQL Database
- Setting up the ASP.NET Core app
- Configuring the SQL Azure Database
- Connecting the ASP.NET Core website to Azure SQL
These step-by-step instructions will show you how to set up and connect to the Azure database from ASP.NET Core. The same steps will work for ASP.NET Core web API projects, which you can use as a mobile app back-end.
Visual Studio for Mac, version 7.3
On December 4, we released Visual Studio for Mac, version 7.3, bringing an even better Visual Studio for Mac to you as a free update. This release brings performance and stability enhancements, as well as new features. Visual Studio Test Platform (VSTest) now provides more flexibility in choosing your test frameworks and automatic iOS app signing, reducing the number of manual steps needed to build your app. Check out the full blog post for more details and be sure to download or update to Visual Studio for Mac, version 7.3 today!
Get Started
Download Visual Studio for Mac today, and visit the VS4Mac labs repo on GitHub to check out the new Azure hands-on labs, as well as the previous ones that help you get started building apps, games, and services for Xamarin mobile, web, and cloud.
Check out the docs for more in-depth information on Visual Studio for Mac features, and let us know what you think of the labs and Visual Studio for Mac in the comments below.
Craig Dunn, Principal Program Manager @conceptdev Craig works on the Mobile Developer Tools documentation team, where he enjoys writing cross-platform code for iOS, Android, Mac, and Windows platforms with Visual Studio and Xamarin. |