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Skills/dynatrace/dynatrace-for-ai/dt-obs-azure
dt-obs-azure logo

dt-obs-azure

dynatrace/dynatrace-for-ai
679 installs107 stars

Installation

npx skills add https://github.com/dynatrace/dynatrace-for-ai --skill dt-obs-azure

Summary

Azure cloud resources including VMs, VMSS, SQL Database, Storage, AKS, App Service, Functions, VNet networking, load balancers, Event Hubs, Container Apps, and Key Vault. Monitor Azure infrastructure, analyze resource usage, audit security posture, and manage organizational hierarchy across subscriptions and resource groups.

SKILL.md

Azure Cloud Infrastructure

Monitor and analyze Azure resources using Dynatrace Smartscape and DQL. Query Azure services, audit security, manage organizational hierarchy, and plan capacity across your Azure infrastructure.

When to Use This Skill

Use this skill when the user needs to work with Azure resources in Dynatrace. Load the reference file for the task type:

TaskFile to load
Inventory and topology queries(no additional file — use core patterns below)
Query Azure metric timeseries (CPU, latency, throughput)Load references/metrics-performance.md
VNet topology, subnets, NSGs, public IPs, VPN, peeringLoad references/vnet-networking-security.md
Azure SQL, Cosmos DB, PostgreSQL, Redis investigationLoad references/database-monitoring.md
Functions, App Service, AKS infrastructure, Container AppsLoad references/serverless-containers.md
Azure LB, Application Gateway, Front Door, API ManagementLoad references/load-balancing-api.md
WAF rule analysis, false-positive investigationLoad references/load-balancing-api.md
Event Hubs, Service Bus, Event GridLoad references/messaging-integration.md
Storage Accounts, Blob, File, Queue, TableLoad references/storage-monitoring.md
Unattached resources, tag compliance, lifecycleLoad references/resource-management.md
Cost savings, unused resources, SKU analysisLoad references/cost-optimization.md
Capacity headroom, VMSS scaling, quotasLoad references/capacity-planning.md
Security audit, encryption, public access, Key VaultLoad references/security-compliance.md
NSG rule analysis (0.0.0.0/0, open ports)Load references/security-compliance.md
Storage account encryption/public access auditLoad references/security-compliance.md
Cost allocation, chargeback, ownershipLoad references/resource-ownership.md
Determine orchestration context (AKS, VMSS, standalone)Load references/workload-detection.md

---

Core Concepts

Entity Types

Azure resources use the AZURE_* prefix and can be queried using the smartscapeNodes function. All Azure entities are automatically discovered and modeled in Dynatrace Smartscape. Entity type names are derived from the ARM resource provider path: /Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines becomes AZURE_MICROSOFT_COMPUTE_VIRTUALMACHINES. Sub-resources append with underscores: /Microsoft.Sql/servers/databases becomes AZURE_MICROSOFT_SQL_SERVERS_DATABASES.

Compute: AZURE_MICROSOFT_COMPUTE_VIRTUALMACHINES, AZURE_MICROSOFT_COMPUTE_VIRTUALMACHINESCALESETS, AZURE_MICROSOFT_COMPUTE_VIRTUALMACHINESCALESETS_VIRTUALMACHINES, AZURE_MICROSOFT_COMPUTE_DISKS, AZURE_MICROSOFT_COMPUTE_SSHPUBLICKEYS, AZURE_MICROSOFT_COMPUTE_VIRTUALMACHINES_EXTENSIONS Networking: AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_VIRTUALNETWORKS, AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_VIRTUALNETWORKS_SUBNETS, AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_NETWORKSECURITYGROUPS, AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_PUBLICIPADDRESSES, AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_NETWORKINTERFACES, AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_LOADBALANCERS, AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_APPLICATIONGATEWAYS, AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_VIRTUALNETWORKGATEWAYS, AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_CONNECTIONS, AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_EXPRESSROUTECIRCUITS Database: AZURE_MICROSOFT_SQL_SERVERS, AZURE_MICROSOFT_SQL_SERVERS_DATABASES, AZURE_MICROSOFT_CACHE_REDIS, AZURE_MICROSOFT_CACHE_REDISENTERPRISE, AZURE_MICROSOFT_DOCUMENTDB_DATABASEACCOUNTS Storage: AZURE_MICROSOFT_STORAGE_STORAGEACCOUNTS, AZURE_MICROSOFT_STORAGE_STORAGEACCOUNTS_BLOBSERVICES_CONTAINERS, AZURE_MICROSOFT_STORAGE_STORAGEACCOUNTS_FILESERVICES_SHARES, AZURE_MICROSOFT_STORAGE_STORAGEACCOUNTS_QUEUESERVICES_QUEUES, AZURE_MICROSOFT_STORAGE_STORAGEACCOUNTS_TABLESERVICES_TABLES Kubernetes/Containers: AZURE_MICROSOFT_CONTAINERSERVICE_MANAGEDCLUSTERS, AZURE_MICROSOFT_CONTAINERSERVICE_MANAGEDCLUSTERS_AGENTPOOLS, AZURE_MICROSOFT_CONTAINERREGISTRY_REGISTRIES, AZURE_MICROSOFT_APP_CONTAINERAPPS, AZURE_MICROSOFT_APP_MANAGEDENVIRONMENTS, AZURE_MICROSOFT_APP_JOBS App Service: AZURE_MICROSOFT_WEB_SITES, AZURE_MICROSOFT_WEB_SERVERFARMS, AZURE_MICROSOFT_WEB_SITES_FUNCTIONS Messaging: AZURE_MICROSOFT_EVENTHUB_NAMESPACES, AZURE_MICROSOFT_EVENTHUB_NAMESPACES_EVENTHUBS, AZURE_MICROSOFT_SERVICEBUS_NAMESPACES, AZURE_MICROSOFT_SERVICEBUS_NAMESPACES_QUEUES, AZURE_MICROSOFT_SERVICEBUS_NAMESPACES_TOPICS, AZURE_MICROSOFT_SERVICEBUS_NAMESPACES_TOPICS_SUBSCRIPTIONS Security/Identity: AZURE_MICROSOFT_KEYVAULT_VAULTS, AZURE_MICROSOFT_MANAGEDIDENTITY_USERASSIGNEDIDENTITIES Monitoring: AZURE_MICROSOFT_OPERATIONALINSIGHTS_WORKSPACES, AZURE_MICROSOFT_INSIGHTS_COMPONENTS API Management: AZURE_MICROSOFT_APIMANAGEMENT_SERVICE

Azure Organizational Hierarchy

Azure organizes resources in a three-level hierarchy: Tenant > Subscription > Resource Group. Every resource belongs to exactly one resource group within one subscription. Use these fields to scope queries:

filter azure.subscription == "08b9810e-..."
filter azure.resource.group == "my-rg"
filter azure.location == "eastus"

Combine these filters for precise scoping:

smartscapeNodes "AZURE_*"
| filter azure.subscription == "<SUBSCRIPTION_ID>"
    and azure.resource.group == "<RESOURCE_GROUP>"
    and azure.location == "<REGION>"
| summarize count = count(), by: {type}
| sort count desc

To see the organizational breakdown across your environment:

smartscapeNodes "AZURE_*"
| summarize resource_count = count(), by: {azure.subscription, azure.resource.group}
| sort resource_count desc

Common Azure Fields

All Azure entities include:

  • azure.subscription — Azure subscription GUID
  • azure.resource.group — Resource group name
  • azure.location — Azure region (e.g., eastus, polandcentral)
  • azure.resourceType — ARM resource type (e.g., microsoft.compute/virtualmachines)
  • azure.provisioning_state — Provisioning state (e.g., Succeeded)
  • azure.object — Full ARM resource JSON (see Configuration Parsing)
  • cloud.provider — Always azure
  • tags — Resource tags (use ` tags[key] `)

Some entity types also have:

  • azure.resourceId — Full ARM resource ID (VMs and some others)
  • azure.resourceName — Resource name (VMs and some others)
  • azure.availabilityZones — Availability zone list (VMs)

Relationship Types

Azure entity relationships can be traversed using traverse. The dt.traverse.relationship field is not populated for Azure entities, so you must use "*" as the relationship name in all traversal commands.

Key traversal pairs:

  • VM → Disks: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_COMPUTE_DISKS"
  • VM → NICs: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_NETWORKINTERFACES"
  • VM → VMSS: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_COMPUTE_VIRTUALMACHINESCALESETS"
  • VM → Availability Zones: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_RESOURCES_LOCATIONS_AVAILABILITYZONES"
  • VM ← Extensions: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_COMPUTE_VIRTUALMACHINES_EXTENSIONS", direction:backward
  • VMSS → AKS Clusters: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_CONTAINERSERVICE_MANAGEDCLUSTERS"
  • VMSS → Subnets: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_VIRTUALNETWORKS_SUBNETS"
  • VMSS → NSGs: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_NETWORKSECURITYGROUPS"
  • VMSS → LB Backend Pools: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_LOADBALANCERS_BACKENDADDRESSPOOLS"
  • Subnet → VNet: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_VIRTUALNETWORKS"
  • Subnet → NSG: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_NETWORKSECURITYGROUPS"
  • Subnet ← VMSS: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_COMPUTE_VIRTUALMACHINESCALESETS", direction:backward
  • NSG ← NICs: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_NETWORKINTERFACES", direction:backward
  • NSG ← Subnets: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_VIRTUALNETWORKS_SUBNETS", direction:backward
  • LB → Backend Pools: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_LOADBALANCERS_BACKENDADDRESSPOOLS"
  • LB → Frontend IPs: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_LOADBALANCERS_FRONTENDIPCONFIGURATIONS"
  • LB → LB Rules: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_LOADBALANCERS_LOADBALANCINGRULES"
  • SQL Server ← SQL Databases: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_SQL_SERVERS_DATABASES", direction:backward
  • Storage Account ← Blob Containers: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_STORAGE_STORAGEACCOUNTS_BLOBSERVICES_CONTAINERS", direction:backward
  • Storage Account ← File Shares: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_STORAGE_STORAGEACCOUNTS_FILESERVICES_SHARES", direction:backward
  • AKS ← VMSS: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_COMPUTE_VIRTUALMACHINESCALESETS", direction:backward
  • AKS ← Agent Pools: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_CONTAINERSERVICE_MANAGEDCLUSTERS_AGENTPOOLS", direction:backward
  • AKS ← NSGs: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_NETWORKSECURITYGROUPS", direction:backward
  • AKS ← Public IPs: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_PUBLICIPADDRESSES", direction:backward
  • AKS → Public IPs: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_PUBLICIPADDRESSES"
  • Web Site → App Service Plan: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_WEB_SERVERFARMS"
  • Web Site ← Functions: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_WEB_SITES_FUNCTIONS", direction:backward
  • Container App → Managed Environment: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_APP_MANAGEDENVIRONMENTS"
  • EventHub Namespace ← Event Hubs: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_EVENTHUB_NAMESPACES_EVENTHUBS", direction:backward
  • ServiceBus Namespace ← Queues: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_SERVICEBUS_NAMESPACES_QUEUES", direction:backward
  • ServiceBus Namespace ← Topics: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_SERVICEBUS_NAMESPACES_TOPICS", direction:backward
  • ServiceBus Topic ← Subscriptions: traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_SERVICEBUS_NAMESPACES_TOPICS_SUBSCRIPTIONS", direction:backward
  • Use fieldsKeep:{field1, field2} to carry fields through multi-hop traversals
  • After a single-hop traverse, use dt.traverse.history[0][id] to get the source entity ID, then lookup to resolve the source entity name:
  | fieldsAdd sourceId = dt.traverse.history[0][id]
  | lookup [smartscapeNodes "SOURCE_TYPE" | fields name, id], sourceField: sourceId, lookupField: id, prefix: "src."
  • After multi-hop traversals, dt.traverse.history[-N] works for fields carried via fieldsKeep

Azure Metric Naming Convention

Dynatrace ingests Azure Monitor metrics and exposes them using this naming pattern:

cloud.azure.<provider_namespace>.<resource_type>.<MetricName>

The <provider_namespace> uses underscores within the namespace (e.g., microsoft_compute) and <resource_type> is lowercase (e.g., virtualmachines). Hierarchy levels are dot-separated: microsoft_sql.servers.databases. <MetricName> is the Azure Monitor metric name.

Examples:

Azure Monitor metricDynatrace metric key
VM Percentage CPUcloud.azure.microsoft_compute.virtualmachines.PercentageCPU
SQL DB cpu_percentcloud.azure.microsoft_sql.servers.databases.cpu_percent
Storage Ingresscloud.azure.microsoft_storage.storageaccounts.Ingress
Event Hub IncomingMessagescloud.azure.microsoft_eventhub.namespaces.IncomingMessages
Service Bus IncomingMessagescloud.azure.microsoft_servicebus.namespaces.IncomingMessages
App Service HttpResponseTimecloud.azure.microsoft_web.sites.HttpResponseTime
Load Balancer ByteCountcloud.azure.microsoft_network.loadbalancers.ByteCount
AKS node_cpu_usage_percentagecloud.azure.microsoft_containerservice.managedclusters.node_cpu_usage_percentage
Cosmos DB TotalRequestUnitscloud.azure.microsoft_documentdb.databaseaccounts.TotalRequestUnits
Redis serverLoadcloud.azure.microsoft_cache.redis.serverLoad
App Gateway TotalRequestscloud.azure.microsoft_network.applicationgateways.TotalRequests

To query a metric:

timeseries cpu = avg(cloud.azure.microsoft_compute.virtualmachines.PercentageCPU),
           by: {dt.smartscape_source.id},
  from: now()-1h
| limit 10

Important: Never refer to these as "Azure Monitor alerts" or "Azure Monitor metrics" in output. Dynatrace monitors Azure resources natively through its Azure integration — these are Dynatrace metrics ingested from Azure.

Configuration Parsing with azure.object

The azure.object field contains the full ARM resource JSON. Parse it with the azjson alias:

parse azure.object, "JSON:azjson"

The JSON is wrapped in a configuration key:

{
  "configuration": {
    "id": "<ARM resource ID>",
    "name": "<resource name>",
    "type": "<ARM resource type>",
    "location": "<region>",
    "sku": { ... },
    "properties": { ... },
    "zones": [...]
  },
  "tags": { ... }
}

Access patterns:

  • Properties: azjson[configuration][properties][field]
  • SKU: azjson[configuration][sku][name]
  • Kind: azjson[configuration][kind]
  • Zones: azjson[configuration][zones]

Common configuration fields by service:

  • VM: properties.hardwareProfile.vmSize, properties.storageProfile.imageReference.offer, properties.storageProfile.osDisk.osType, properties.extended.instanceView.powerState.displayStatus
  • VMSS: sku.name (VM size), sku.capacity (instance count), tags.aks-managed-poolName
  • NSG: properties.securityRules[] (custom rules array), properties.securityRules[].properties.direction, properties.securityRules[].properties.access, properties.securityRules[].properties.sourceAddressPrefix
  • Storage Account: kind (e.g., StorageV2), sku.name, properties.accessTier, properties.supportsHttpsTrafficOnly, properties.allowBlobPublicAccess, properties.encryption.keySource
  • SQL Server: properties.fullyQualifiedDomainName, properties.publicNetworkAccess, properties.minimalTlsVersion
  • SQL Database: sku.name (tier), sku.capacity (DTU/vCore), properties.status, properties.zoneRedundant
  • AKS: properties.kubernetesVersion, properties.powerState.code, properties.networkProfile.networkPlugin, properties.enableRBAC
  • Web Site: kind (e.g., functionapp,linux), properties.state, properties.defaultHostName, properties.siteConfig.linuxFxVersion
  • Container App: properties.runningStatus, properties.template.containers[].image, properties.template.scale.minReplicas, properties.template.scale.maxReplicas
  • Event Hub Namespace: sku.name, properties.kafkaEnabled, properties.zoneRedundant
  • Service Bus Namespace: sku.name (Basic/Standard/Premium), properties.zoneRedundant, properties.minimumTlsVersion, properties.publicNetworkAccess, properties.disableLocalAuth, properties.status
  • Service Bus Queue: properties.maxSizeInMegabytes, properties.enablePartitioning, properties.deadLetteringOnMessageExpiration, properties.maxDeliveryCount, properties.lockDuration, properties.requiresDuplicateDetection, properties.status
  • Key Vault: properties.enableRbacAuthorization, properties.enableSoftDelete, properties.publicNetworkAccess
  • Redis: properties.sku.name, properties.hostName, properties.redisVersion, properties.enableNonSslPort
  • Cosmos DB: kind (e.g., GlobalDocumentDB), properties.EnabledApiTypes, properties.consistencyPolicy.defaultConsistencyLevel
  • Load Balancer: sku.name, tags.aks-managed-cluster-name
  • App Gateway: properties.sku.name, properties.sku.tier, properties.operationalState, properties.webApplicationFirewallConfiguration.enabled, properties.webApplicationFirewallConfiguration.firewallMode (Detection/Prevention), properties.webApplicationFirewallConfiguration.ruleSetType, properties.webApplicationFirewallConfiguration.ruleSetVersion, properties.webApplicationFirewallConfiguration.disabledRuleGroups[], properties.webApplicationFirewallConfiguration.exclusions[], properties.firewallPolicy.id

---

Query Patterns

All Azure queries build on four core patterns. Master these and adapt them to any entity type.

Pattern 1: Resource Discovery

List resources by type, filter by subscription/resource group/region/tags, summarize counts:

smartscapeNodes "AZURE_*"
| filter azure.subscription == "<SUBSCRIPTION_ID>" and azure.location == "<REGION>"
| summarize count = count(), by: {type}
| sort count desc

To list a specific type, replace "AZURE_*" with the entity type (e.g., "AZURE_MICROSOFT_COMPUTE_VIRTUALMACHINES"). Add | fields name, azure.subscription, azure.resource.group, azure.location, ... to select specific columns. Use ` tags[TagName] ` for tag-based filtering.

Pattern 2: Configuration Parsing

Parse azure.object JSON for detailed configuration fields:

smartscapeNodes "AZURE_MICROSOFT_COMPUTE_VIRTUALMACHINES"
| parse azure.object, "JSON:azjson"
| fieldsAdd vmSize = azjson[configuration][properties][hardwareProfile][vmSize],
            osType = azjson[configuration][properties][storageProfile][osDisk][osType]
| summarize vm_count = count(), by: {vmSize, osType, azure.location}

Pattern 3: Relationship Traversal

Follow relationships between resources. Use "*" for the relationship name since Azure does not populate dt.traverse.relationship:

smartscapeNodes "AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_LOADBALANCERS"
| parse azure.object, "JSON:azjson"
| fieldsAdd lbSku = azjson[configuration][sku][name]
| traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_NETWORK_LOADBALANCERS_BACKENDADDRESSPOOLS", fieldsKeep:{lbSku, name, id}
| fieldsAdd backendPoolName = name
| traverse "*", "AZURE_MICROSOFT_COMPUTE_VIRTUALMACHINESCALESETS", direction:backward, fieldsKeep:{backendPoolName, id}
| fieldsAdd loadBalancerName = dt.traverse.history[-2][name],
            loadBalancerId = dt.traverse.history[-2][id],
            backendPoolId = dt.traverse.history[-1][id]

Key differences from AWS traversals:

  • Always use "*" as the relationship name (relationship type names are empty for Azure)
  • Azure relationships primarily follow a parent-child hierarchy: sub-resources link backward to parent resources
  • AKS is a major relationship hub with backward links from VMSS, NSGs, LBs, Public IPs, Agent Pools, and Managed Identities

Pattern 4: Tag-Based Ownership

Group resources by any tag for ownership/chargeback:

smartscapeNodes "AZURE_*"
| filter isNotNull(tags[`<TAG_NAME>`])
| summarize resource_count = count(), by: {tags[`<TAG_NAME>`], type}
| sort resource_count desc

Common Azure tags: ` tags[ACE:CREATED-BY] , tags[dt_owner_email] , tags[dt_owner_team] , tags[project] , tags[managed-by] . Replace "AZURE_*"` with a specific type to scope to one service.

Find untagged resources: | filter arraySize(tags) == 0

---

Reference Guide

Load reference files for detailed queries when the core patterns above need service-specific adaptation.

ReferenceWhen to loadKey content
vnet-networking-security.mdVNet topology, subnets, NSGs, public IPs, VPN, peeringVNet/subnet mapping, NSG blast radius, public IP detection
database-monitoring.mdAzure SQL, Cosmos DB, Redis CacheService tier distribution, zone redundancy, public access checks
serverless-containers.mdFunctions, App Service, AKS infra, Container AppsRuntime distribution, App Service Plan mapping, AKS node pools
load-balancing-api.mdLoad Balancers, Application Gateways, API ManagementLB backend pool traversal, App Gateway routing, APIM config
messaging-integration.mdEvent Hubs, Service Bus, Event GridNamespace inventory, Kafka enablement, throughput unit analysis
storage-monitoring.mdStorage Accounts, Blob, File, Queue, TableSKU distribution, access tier, encryption audit, public access
resource-management.mdResource audits, tag compliance, lifecycleUnattached disks, tag coverage, provisioning state analysis
cost-optimization.mdCost savings, unused resources, sizingVM SKU analysis, unattached disks, deallocated VMs
capacity-planning.mdCapacity analysis, scaling, utilizationVMSS headroom, subnet IP counts, AKS node pool sizing
security-compliance.mdSecurity audits, encryption, public access, Key VaultNSG rule analysis, TLS version audit, public endpoint detection, encryption checks
resource-ownership.mdChargeback, ownership, cost allocationTag-based grouping, subscription/resource-group summaries
workload-detection.mdDetermine orchestration context and resolution pathAKS node, VMSS member, standalone VM detection for blast radius analysis
metrics-performance.mdQuery metric timeseries for a specific resourceDQL timeseries patterns for VM, SQL, Storage, Event Hub, LB, App Service, AKS, Cosmos DB, Redis, App Gateway

---

Best Practices

Query Optimization

  1. Filter early by subscription, resource group, and region
  2. Use specific entity types (avoid "AZURE_*" wildcards when possible)
  3. Limit results with | limit N for exploration
  4. Use isNotNull() checks before accessing nested fields

Configuration Parsing

  1. Always parse azure.object with JSON parser: parse azure.object, "JSON:azjson"
  2. Use consistent field naming: fieldsAdd configField = azjson[configuration][properties][field]
  3. Access SKU via azjson[configuration][sku][name] (not inside properties)
  4. Check for null values after parsing — not all entity types have the same properties structure
  5. Use toString() for complex nested objects

Organizational Hierarchy

  1. Always scope queries by azure.subscription in multi-subscription environments
  2. Use azure.resource.group to narrow to a team or application boundary
  3. Combine azure.location for region-specific analysis
  4. Use summarize ... by: {azure.subscription, azure.resource.group} for organizational breakdowns

Tagging Strategy

  1. Use ` tags[key] ` for filtering (backtick-quoted key names)
  2. Check arraySize(tags) for untagged resources
  3. Track tag coverage with summarize operations
  4. Common ownership tags: dt_owner_email, dt_owner_team, ACE:CREATED-BY

---

Limitations and Notes

Smartscape Limitations

  • Azure object configuration requires parsing with parse azure.object, "JSON:azjson"
  • Azure metrics are available as Dynatrace metrics using the cloud.azure.* naming convention (see Azure Metric Naming Convention)
  • Resource discovery depends on Azure integration configuration in Dynatrace
  • Tag synchronization may have slight delays

Relationship Traversal

  • Azure relationship type names are empty — always use "*" as the relationship name in traverse commands
  • Use direction:backward for reverse relationships (e.g., sub-resources to parent)
  • Use fieldsKeep to maintain important fields through traversal
  • Access traversal history with dt.traverse.history[0][id] for single-hop source entity ID; use lookup to resolve source entity name
  • For multi-hop traversals, dt.traverse.history[-N] accesses fields carried via fieldsKeep
  • Azure relationships primarily follow parent-child hierarchy patterns
  • AKS is a major relationship hub — expect many backward relationships converging on AKS cluster entities

AKS Coverage

  • This skill covers AKS infrastructure-layer entities only (clusters, agent pools, VMSS, networking)
  • For Kubernetes workload-layer observability (pods, deployments, services, namespaces), defer to the dt-obs-kubernetes skill

General Tips

  • Use getNodeName() for human-readable resource names
  • Handle null values gracefully with isNotNull() and isNull()
  • Combine subscription, resource group, and region filters for large environments
  • Use countDistinct() for unique resource counts
  • The azure.resourceType field is lowercase ARM format (e.g., microsoft.compute/virtualmachines) — useful for filtering but not for entity type matching

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