The Azure Extension Pack installs a collection of extensions for working with Azure resources in VS Code.
If you do not have an Azure subscription, sign up today for a free account and get $200 in Azure Credits to try out any combination of Azure services.
- The Azure App Service extension lets you quickly browse, create, manage, and deploy Azure App Service websites.
- The [Azure Functions](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ms-azuretools.vscode-azurefunctions extension lets you quickly browse, create, manage, deploy, and even debug Azure functions locally.
- The Docker Tools extension makes it easy to develop and deploy containerized micro-service based applications using Docker containers. Use Visual Studio Team Services to create a CI/CD pipeline to build your containerized applications, deploy them to the Azure Container Registry, run web sites directly in Azure App Services, and run multi-container systems at scale using the Azure Container Service.
- The Azure Data Lake Tools make it easy to develop U-SQL projects against Azure Data Lake! This extension provides a cross-platform, light-weight, keyboard-focused authoring experience for U-SQL while maintaining a full set of development functions.
-
The Azure CosmosDB extension lets you create, manage, and query CosmosDB accounts, including support for Mongo, Graphs, Tables, and DocumentDB databases.
-
The Microsoft SQL extension provides support for developing Microsoft SQL Server, Azure SQL Database and SQL Data Warehouse with a rich set of functionalities. For example, create and manage connection profiles and most recently used connections. Write T-SQL script with IntelliSense, snippets, syntax colorizations, error validations and GO batch separator. Execute scripts, view the results in a document, and save results to json or csv file format and view in the editor.
- The Visual Studio Team Services extension makes it easy to connect to your Team Services and Team Foundation Servers, allowing you to easily monitory builds, pull requests, and work items for your TFVC or Git source repositories.
-
The Azure IoT Edge for VS Code makes it easy to code, build, deploy, and debug your IoT Edge solutions.
-
The Azure IoT Toolkit for VS Code makes it easy to develop and connect your IoT applications to Azure. With this extension, you can interact with Azure IoT Hub, manage devices connected to Azure IoT Hub, and develop with code snippets for Azure IoT Hub.
-
The Azure Tools for VS Code adds commands to the Command Palette (F1) that make it easy to create and access Azure resources directly from VS Code. For example, you can create App Service Web Apps and Functions, Storage accounts, and browse to any number of resources in the Azure Portal.
-
The Azure Resource Manager (ARM) Tools provide a rich editing experience for Azure Resource Manager deployment templates and template language expressions. For example, IntelliSense for TLE function names, parameter references, signature help, GoTo Definition, Peek Definitions, and Find All References (Shift+F12) as well as Errors and Warnings, making it quick and easy to author ARM templates in VS Code.
-
The Azure CLI Tools provide an enhanced editing experience when authoring Azure CLI 2.0 commands, with full completions (IntelliSense), the ability to invoke one or more commands in the terminal, and the ability to easily view and format results as a separate JSON document.
-
The Azure Application Insights extension brings information from your production services right into the editor (via Code Lenses), helping you to find and fix issues even faster.
By intalling this extension you will install all of the extensions listed above. Some of these extensions will also install the Azure Account extension which provides a single Azure login and subscription filtering experience.
You can uninstall all the extensions by uninstalling this extension pack.
Got a suggestion for the Azure Extension Pack? Submit a new issue and a PR with an updated package.json and README.md and we'll take a look!
Before we can accept your pull request you will need to sign a Contribution License Agreement. All you need to do is to submit a pull request, then the PR will get appropriately labelled (e.g. cla-required
, cla-norequired
, cla-signed
, cla-already-signed
). If you already signed the agreement we will continue with reviewing the PR, otherwise system will tell you how you can sign the CLA. Once you sign the CLA all future PR's will be labeled as cla-signed
.