A single database is fully managed platform as a service (PaaS) database as a service (DbaaS) that is ideal storage engine for the modern cloud-born applications. In this section, you'll learn how to quickly configure and create a single database in Azure SQL Database.
Quickstart overview
In this section, you'll see an overview of available articles that can help you to quickly get started with single databases. The following quickstarts enable you to quickly create a single database, configure a server-level firewall rule, and then import a database into the new single database using a .bacpac file:
If you have an existing database on SQL Server that you want to migrate to Azure SQL Database, you should install Data Migration Assistant (DMA) that will analyze your databases on SQL Server and find any issue that could block migration. If you don't find any issue, you can export your database as .bacpac file and import it using the Azure portal or SqlPackage.
Automating management operations
You can use PowerShell or the Azure CLI to create, configure, and scale your database.
Migrating to a single database with minimal downtime
These quickstarts enable you to quickly create or import your database to Azure using a .bacpac file. However, .bacpac and .dacpac files are designed to quickly move databases across different versions of SQL Server and within Azure SQL, or to implement continuous integration in your DevOps pipeline. However, this method is not designed for migration of your production databases with minimal downtime, because you would need to stop adding new data, wait for the export of the source database to a .bacpac file to complete, and then wait for the import into Azure SQL Database to complete. All of this waiting results in downtime of your application, especially for large databases. To move your production database, you need a better way to migrate that guarantees minimal downtime of migration. For this, use the Data Migration Service (DMS) to migrate your database with the minimal downtime. DMS accomplishes this by incrementally pushing the changes made in your source database to the single database being restored. This way, you can quickly switch your application from source to target database with the minimal downtime.
Hands-on learning modules
The following free Learn modules help you learn about Azure SQL Database.
Find out what makes Azure SQL Database a good choice for your relational database, how to create the database from the portal and connect with Azure Cloud Shell.
Administer an SQL Server database infrastructure for cloud, on-premises and hybrid relational databases using the Microsoft PaaS relational database offerings.