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Quickstart: Create an Azure SignalR Service - Bicep In this quickstart, learn how to create an Azure SignalR Service using Bicep. vicancy lianwei 05/18/2022 quickstart azure-signalr-service subject-armqs, mode-arm, devx-track-bicep
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--- title: 'Quickstart: Create an Azure SignalR Service - Bicep' description: In this quickstart, learn how to create an Azure SignalR Service using Bicep. author: vicancy ms.author: lianwei ms.date: 05/18/2022 ms.topic: quickstart ms.service: azure-signalr-service ms.custom: subject-armqs, mode-arm, devx-track-bicep --- # Quickstart: Use Bicep to deploy Azure SignalR Service This quickstart describes how to use Bicep to create an Azure SignalR Service using Azure CLI or PowerShell. [!INCLUDE [About Bicep](~/reusable-content/ce-skilling/azure/includes/resource-manager-quickstart-bicep-introduction.md)] ## Prerequisites An Azure account with an active subscription. [Create one for free](https://azure.microsoft.com/pricing/purchase-options/azure-account?cid=msft_learn). ## Review the Bicep file The Bicep file used in this quickstart is from [Azure Quickstart Templates](https://azure.microsoft.com/resources/templates/signalr/). :::code language="bicep" source="~/quickstart-templates/quickstarts/microsoft.signalrservice/signalr/main.bicep"::: The Bicep file defines one Azure resource: * [**Microsoft.SignalRService/SignalR**](/azure/templates/microsoft.signalrservice/signalr) ## Deploy the Bicep file 1. Save the Bicep file as **main.bicep** to your local computer. 1. Deploy the Bicep file using either Azure CLI or Azure PowerShell. # [CLI](#tab/CLI) ```azurecli az group create --name exampleRG --location eastus az deployment group create --resource-group exampleRG --template-file main.bicep ``` # [PowerShell](#tab/PowerShell) ```azurepowershell New-AzResourceGroup -Name exampleRG -Location eastus New-AzResourceGroupDeployment -ResourceGroupName exampleRG -TemplateFile ./main.bicep ``` --- When the deployment finishes, you should see a message indicating the deployment succeeded. ## Review deployed resources Use the Azure portal, Azure CLI, or Azure PowerShell to list the deployed resources in the resource group. # [CLI](#tab/CLI) ```azurecli-interactive az resource list --resource-group exampleRG ``` # [PowerShell](#tab/PowerShell) ```azurepowershell-interactive Get-AzResource -ResourceGroupName exampleRG ``` --- ## Clean up resources When no longer needed, use the Azure portal, Azure CLI, or Azure PowerShell to delete the resource group and its resources. # [CLI](#tab/CLI) ```azurecli-interactive az group delete --name exampleRG ``` # [PowerShell](#tab/PowerShell) ```azurepowershell-interactive Remove-AzResourceGroup -Name exampleRG ``` --- ## Next steps For a step-by-step tutorial that guides you through the process of creating a Bicep file using Visual Studio Code, see: > [!div class="nextstepaction"] > [Quickstart: Create Bicep files with Visual Studio Code](../azure-resource-manager/bicep/quickstart-create-bicep-use-visual-studio-code.md)
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