# Microsoft Azure This quickstart shows you how to set up the Coder server on Azure which will provision Azure-hosted Linux workspaces. ## Requirements This quickstart assumes you have full administrator privileges on Azure. ## Create An Azure VM From the Azure Portal, navigate to the Virtual Machines Dashboard. Click Create, and select creating a new Azure Virtual machine . This will bring you to the `Create a virtual machine` page. Select the subscription group of your choice, or create one if necessary. Next, name the VM something relevant to this project using the naming convention of your choice. Change the region to something more appropriate for your current location. For this tutorial, we will use the base selection of the Ubuntu Gen2 Image and keep the rest of the base settings for this image the same. Up next, under `Inbound port rules` modify the Select `inbound ports` to also take in `HTTPS` and `HTTP`. The set up for the image is complete at this stage. Click `Review and Create` - review the information and click `Create`. A popup will appear asking you to download the key pair for the server. Click `Download private key and create resource` and place it into a folder of your choice on your local system. Click `Return to create a virtual machine`. Your VM will start up! Click `Go to resource` in the virtual machine and copy the public IP address. You will need it to SSH into the virtual machine via your local machine. Follow [these instructions](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/virtual-machines/linux-vm-connect?tabs=Linux) to SSH into the virtual machine. Once on the VM, you can run and install Coder using your method of choice. For the fastest install, we recommend running Coder as a system service. ## Install Coder For this instance, we will run Coder as a system service, however you can run Coder a multitude of different ways. You can learn more about those [here](https://coder.com/docs/coder-oss/latest/install). In the Azure VM instance, run the following command to install Coder ```sh curl -fsSL | sh ``` ## Run Coder Run the following command to start Coder as a system level service: ```sh sudo systemctl enable --now coder ``` The following command will get you information about the Coder launch service ```sh journalctl -u coder.service -b ``` This will return a series of logs related to running Coder as a system service. Embedded in the logs is the Coder Access URL. Copy the URL and run the following command to create the first user, either on your local machine or in the instance terminal. ```sh coder login ``` Fill out the prompts. Be sure to save use email and password as these are your admin username and password. You can now access Coder on your local machine with the relevant `***.try.coder.app` URL and logging in with the username and password. ## Creating and Uploading Your First Template First, run `coder template init` to create your first template. You’ll be given a list of possible templates to use. This tutorial will show you how to set up your Coder instance to create a Linux based machine on Azure. Press `enter` to select `Develop in Linux on Azure` template. This will return the following: To get started using the Azure template, install the Azure CLI by following the instructions [here](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/cli/azure/install-azure-cli-linux?pivots=apt). Run `az login` and follow the instructions to configure the Azure command line. Coder is running as a system service, which creates the system user `coder` for handling processes. The Coder user will require access to the Azure credentials to initialize the template. Run the following commands to copy the Azure credentials and give the `coder` user access to them: ```sh sudo cp -r ~/.azure /home/coder/.azure sudo chown -R coder:coder /home/coder/.azure/ ``` Navigate to the `./azure-linux` folder where you created your template and run the following command to put the template on your Coder instance. ```sh coder templates create ``` Congrats! You can now navigate to your Coder dashboard and use this Linux on Azure template to create a new workspace! ## Next Steps - [Port-forward](../networking/port-forwarding.md) - [Learn more about template configuration](../templates.md) - [Configure more IDEs](../ides/web-ides.md)