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Friday, 15 May 2020

Configuring Azure Firewall with a contiguous public IP Range

The Azure Firewall is a service offering available to customers in Azure. I'm not going to cover the details of the architecture or the basics of deploying Azure Firewall in this article. 

Many enterprise customers are adopting Azure Firewall to help control and manage the traffic flow for their services within a Azure and in hybrid locations across their WAN. A common ask for customers who are deploying edge facing services is around Public IP space, and how this differs in the cloud compared to on-premise with a traditional ISP.

Any customer with an active Azure Subscription can allocate and assign public addresses to their services from the portal. Many services, such as Azure Virtual Machines are provisioned with a public address as part of the automated deployment process.

Enterprise customers are usually looking for a little more control. This is where Public IP Prefixes come into the picture. It is possible for a customer to define a CIDR Block of public addresses directly in their subscription, to be used at their disposal. This is done by creating a new Public IP Prefix, as shown below.

You will see in the article below Public IP Prefixes can be provisioned with /31, /30, /29 or /28 CIDR Blocks giving a contiguous range of 2, 4, 8 or 16 public addresses. It is possible to bind one of these Public IP Prefixes to your Azure Firewall to ensure the public address range is contiguous.



Once you have you Public IP Prefix create, you must then use the Add IP Address option from the resource. This will create an actual usable address within the prefix range which can in turn be associated to Azure Firewall.


When you provision a new address you must give it a name and a resolveable DNS label.


Now head over to Azure Firewall and go to the Public IP Configuration section and click on Add a Public IP Configuration. This will guide you through binding this new public address to your Azure Firewall. It's worth noting that you cannot provision an Azure Firewall with a Public IP Prefix, you must first create the Azure Firewall with it's default of one random public address, then retrospectively configure the prefix like we are doing here.


From the Add Public IP Configuration window from within Azure Firewall you will notice from the drop down that the public addresses you provisioned as part of the prefix block are now available to be bound to the outside of the Azure Firewall.