Q. As an Azure Cloud Solution Architecture, how would you go
about ensuring business continuity for your clients and their workloads?
A: As an Azure cloud solution architect, my first move is to
turn “disaster recovery” into a workload-specific operating model, not a
generic secondary-region checkbox. My clients have workloads that fall into one
of the following categories: 1. having resource types of web apps for APIs,
storage account based static website for UI application and an application
gateway for web-application firewall and bot protection, 2. having automation
in terms of Azure Databricks jobs, notebooks and azure-data-factory-based
data-transfer pipelines that run on scheduled basis 3. having significant and
heavy Kubernetes applications and jobs with either MySQL, CosmosDB or Postgres
backend databases with airflow scheduler and 4. having GenAI heavy Databricks
applications with Langfuse monitoring and remote model and deployment API calls
using OpenAI chat specification
Because all of these stamps live in Central US, I should
anchor the DR design on Azure region-pairing1, service-native
replication, pre-determined RTO/RPO targets, and rehearsed failover/failback
runbooks; Azure documents that paired regions are in the same geography, are
updated sequentially, and are prioritized for recovery during a broad outage.
For a Central US footprint, the practical implication is that I prefer a
paired-region strategy for the dependent services and the platform control
plane, then decide case by case whether the secondary landing zone should be
active-passive or active-active based on business criticality, latency
tolerance, and the cost of duplicate infrastructure.
For the first stamp, where I have web apps plus a
storage-account-backed static site for UI and APIs behind Application Gateway
with WAF, the continuity design should separate traffic steering, application
state, and content distribution.2 Use a secondary region with
identical infrastructure deployed from code, put the web tier behind a
failover-capable global entry point if the business requires regional
survivability, and make the Application Gateway/WAF configuration itself
reproducible so that a new gateway can be stood up quickly in the secondary
region. For the static UI, I make sure the storage account uses a geo-redundant
replication strategy appropriate for the RPO my clients are willing to accept,
because storage failover is distinct from application failover and the app must
be able to point to the recovered endpoint after a region event. My runbook
should include DNS or traffic-manager cutover, WAF policy validation, secret
and certificate rehydration, and health-probe checks that confirm both the APIs
and the static website are serving correctly before declaring the failover
complete.
For the second stamp, where Databricks jobs, notebooks, and
Azure Data Factory pipelines dominate, the real continuity challenge is
orchestration and data synchronization rather than just compute redeployment.3
Azure Databricks guidance for DR emphasizes having a secondary workspace in a
secondary region, stopping workloads in the primary, starting recovery in the
secondary, updating routing and workspace URLs, and then retriggering jobs once
the secondary environment is operational. In practice, that means my client’
notebooks, job definitions, cluster policies, libraries, secrets integration,
and workspace dependencies must be stored in source control and redeployed
automatically, while the actual data layer uses a replication or reprocessing
plan that matches the pipeline’s tolerance for replay. For ADF, I treat
metadata, triggers, linked services, and integration runtimes as recoverable
control-plane assets and separately design for self-hosted integration runtime (SHIR)
redundancy if those pipelines depend on SHIR, since the integration runtime can
become the hidden single point of failure. The failover sequence should be duly
tested: I stop or freeze primary runs, validate data consistency, fail over the
data platform, rebind the orchestration layer, and then resume scheduled jobs
only after confirming downstream dependencies and checkpoint state.
For the third stamp, where heavy Kubernetes workloads depend
on MySQL, Cosmos DB, or PostgreSQL plus Airflow, I think in layers: cluster
recovery, workload redeployment, workflow state, and database continuity.4
Azure recommends an active-passive pattern for AKS Disaster Recovery in which we
deploy two identical clusters in two regions and protect node pools with
availability zones within each region, because cluster-local HA does not
substitute for regional DR. I also need backup-and-restore discipline for
cluster state and namespaces, with Azure Backup for AKS or equivalent backup
tooling providing recoverable manifests, persistent volume data, and
application hooks where needed; cross-region restore is operationally more
complex than same-region restore, so my clients’ recovery objectives should
reflect the restore time, not just the existence of backups. For the backend
database, Cosmos DB is strongest if I configure multi-region distribution and
automatic failover, because Microsoft documents mention high availability and
turnkey DR for multi-region accounts. PostgreSQL flexible server can use
geo-restore or cross-region read replicas, with failover behavior and RPO
depending on the selected configuration, while MySQL should be handled with its
own BCDR pattern and automated backups or replication design appropriate to the
service tier. Airflow itself should not be treated as an afterthought: the
scheduler, metadata database, DAG definitions, and any XCom or queue
dependencies must be recoverable as code and data, and I rehearse how the
scheduler is restarted only after the database and storage backends are
consistent and reachable.
For the fourth stamp, where the environment is GenAI-heavy
with Databricks, Langfuse monitoring, and remote model calls using the OpenAI
chat-style API, continuity depends on both platform resilience and external
dependency management.5 Databricks DR guidance still applies here,
but I also need to account for the fact that model calls may be routed to a
remote service that is outside my Azure region strategy, so the application
must be resilient to transient model endpoint failures, rate limits, and
regional unavailability through retries, fallback models, circuit breakers, and
queue-based buffering. Langfuse telemetry, prompt logs, and trace data should
be shipped to resilient storage or a secondary observability plane so that I do
not lose auditability during failover, because post-incident reconstruction is
especially important in GenAI systems where prompt versions, tools, and output
traces materially affect behavior. In a high-security design, keep secrets in
managed key stores, isolate outbound access, restrict model endpoints through
approved egress paths, and ensure the secondary region can re-establish the
same network posture, identity bindings, and policy controls before any
production workload is re-enabled. If the model provider is unavailable, the
application should degrade gracefully rather than fail catastrophically, for
example by switching to cached responses, a smaller fallback model, or a
read-only mode for non-critical workflows, and my client’s DR test plan should specifically
validate those behavioral fallbacks rather than only infrastructure recovery.