Slots Define
To kill, to put someone in a grave, which is literally a slot in the ground. Slot meaning: 1. A long, narrow hole, especially one for putting coins into or for fitting a separate piece into. Slot: 1 n a small slit (as for inserting a coin or depositing mail) “he put a quarter in the slot ” Types: coin slot a slot through which coins can be inserted into a slot machine mail slot a slot (usually in a door) through which mail can be delivered Type of: slit a long narrow opening n a time assigned on a schedule or agenda “the TV. The button click (signal) is connected to the action (slot). In this example, the method slotmethod will be called if the signal emits. This principle of connecting slots methods or function to a widget, applies to all widgets.
-->Azure Functions deployment slots allow your function app to run different instances called 'slots'. Slots are different environments exposed via a publicly available endpoint. One app instance is always mapped to the production slot, and you can swap instances assigned to a slot on demand. Function apps running under the Apps Service plan may have multiple slots, while under the Consumption plan only one slot is allowed.
The following reflect how functions are affected by swapping slots:
- Traffic redirection is seamless; no requests are dropped because of a swap.
- If a function is running during a swap, execution continues and the next triggers are routed to the swapped app instance.
Note
Slots are currently not available for the Linux Consumption plan.
Why use slots?
There are a number of advantages to using deployment slots. The following scenarios describe common uses for slots:
- Different environments for different purposes: Using different slots gives you the opportunity to differentiate app instances before swapping to production or a staging slot.
- Prewarming: Deploying to a slot instead of directly to production allows the app to warm up before going live. Additionally, using slots reduces latency for HTTP-triggered workloads. Instances are warmed up before deployment, which reduces the cold start for newly deployed functions.
- Easy fallbacks: After a swap with production, the slot with a previously staged app now has the previous production app. If the changes swapped into the production slot aren't as you expect, you can immediately reverse the swap to get your 'last known good instance' back.
Swap operations
During a swap, one slot is considered the source and the other the target. The source slot has the instance of the application that is applied to the target slot. The following steps ensure the target slot doesn't experience downtime during a swap:
Apply settings: Settings from the target slot are applied to all instances of the source slot. For example, the production settings are applied to the staging instance. The applied settings include the following categories:
- Slot-specific app settings and connection strings (if applicable)
- Continuous deployment settings (if enabled)
- App Service authentication settings (if enabled)
Wait for restarts and availability: The swap waits for every instance in the source slot to complete its restart and to be available for requests. If any instance fails to restart, the swap operation reverts all changes to the source slot and stops the operation.
Update routing: If all instances on the source slot are warmed up successfully, the two slots complete the swap by switching routing rules. After this step, the target slot (for example, the production slot) has the app that's previously warmed up in the source slot.
Repeat operation: Now that the source slot has the pre-swap app previously in the target slot, complete the same operation by applying all settings and restarting the instances for the source slot.
Keep in mind the following points:
At any point of the swap operation, initialization of the swapped apps happens on the source slot. The target slot remains online while the source slot is prepared, whether the swap succeeds or fails.
To swap a staging slot with the production slot, make sure that the production slot is always the target slot. This way, the swap operation doesn't affect your production app.
Settings related to event sources and bindings must be configured as deployment slot settingsbefore you start a swap. Marking them as 'sticky' ahead of time ensures events and outputs are directed to the proper instance.
Manage settings
Some configuration settings are slot-specific. The following lists detail which settings change when you swap slots, and which remain the same.
Slot-specific settings:
- Publishing endpoints
- Custom domain names
- Non-public certificates and TLS/SSL settings
- Scale settings
- WebJobs schedulers
- IP restrictions
- Always On
- Diagnostic settings
- Cross-origin resource sharing (CORS)
Non slot-specific settings:
- General settings, such as framework version, 32/64-bit, web sockets
- App settings (can be configured to stick to a slot)
- Connection strings (can be configured to stick to a slot)
- Handler mappings
- Public certificates
- WebJobs content
- Hybrid connections *
- Virtual network integration *
- Service endpoints *
- Azure Content Delivery Network *
Features marked with an asterisk (*) are planned to be unswapped.
Slot Define
Note
Certain app settings that apply to unswapped settings are also not swapped. For example, since diagnostic settings are not swapped, related app settings like WEBSITE_HTTPLOGGING_RETENTION_DAYS
and DIAGNOSTICS_AZUREBLOBRETENTIONDAYS
are also not swapped, even if they don't show up as slot settings.
Free Slot Games
Create a deployment setting
You can mark settings as a deployment setting, which makes it 'sticky'. A sticky setting doesn't swap with the app instance.
If you create a deployment setting in one slot, make sure to create the same setting with a unique value in any other slot that is involved in a swap. This way, while a setting's value doesn't change, the setting names remain consistent among slots. This name consistency ensures your code doesn't try to access a setting that is defined in one slot but not another.
Use the following steps to create a deployment setting:
Navigate to Deployment slots in the function app, and then select the slot name.
Select Configuration, and then select the setting name you want to stick with the current slot.
Select Deployment slot setting, and then select OK.
Once setting section disappears, select Save to keep the changes
Deployment
Slots are empty when you create a slot. You can use any of the supported deployment technologies to deploy your application to a slot.
Scaling
All slots scale to the same number of workers as the production slot.
- For Consumption plans, the slot scales as the function app scales.
- For App Service plans, the app scales to a fixed number of workers. Slots run on the same number of workers as the app plan.
Add a slot
You can add a slot via the CLI or through the portal. The following steps demonstrate how to create a new slot in the portal:
Navigate to your function app.
Select Deployment slots, and then select + Add Slot.
Type the name of the slot and select Add.
Swap slots
You can swap slots via the CLI or through the portal. The following steps demonstrate how to swap slots in the portal:
Navigate to the function app.
Select Deployment slots, and then select Swap.
Verify the configuration settings for your swap and select Swap
The operation may take a moment while the swap operation is executing.
Roll back a swap
If a swap results in an error or you simply want to 'undo' a swap, you can roll back to the initial state. To return to the pre-swapped state, do another swap to reverse the swap.
Remove a slot
You can remove a slot via the CLI or through the portal. The following steps demonstrate how to remove a slot in the portal:
Navigate to Deployment slots in the function app, and then select the slot name.
Select Delete.
Type the name of the deployment slot you want to delete, and then select Delete.
Close the delete confirmation pane.
Automate slot management
Using the Azure CLI, you can automate the following actions for a slot:
Change App Service plan
With a function app that is running under an App Service plan, you can change the underlying App Service plan for a slot.
Note
You can't change a slot's App Service plan under the Consumption plan.
Use the following steps to change a slot's App Service plan:
Navigate to Deployment slots in the function app, and then select the slot name.
Under App Service plan, select Change App Service plan.
Select the plan you want to upgrade to, or create a new plan.
Select OK.
Python Slots Defined
Limitations
Memory Slots Define
Azure Functions deployment slots have the following limitations:
- The number of slots available to an app depends on the plan. The Consumption plan is only allowed one deployment slot. Additional slots are available for apps running under the App Service plan.
- Swapping a slot resets keys for apps that have an
AzureWebJobsSecretStorageType
app setting equal tofiles
. - Slots aren't available for the Linux Consumption plan.
Support levels
There are two levels of support for deployment slots:
- General availability (GA): Fully supported and approved for production use.
- Preview: Not yet supported, but is expected to reach GA status in the future.
Time Slot Define
OS/Hosting plan | Level of support |
---|---|
Windows Consumption | General availability |
Windows Premium | General availability |
Windows Dedicated | General availability |
Linux Consumption | Unsupported |
Linux Premium | General availability |
Linux Dedicated | General availability |