You can now define UDRs to manage how outbound traffic is routed for your container app environment’s subnet.
You can now run your apps on dedicated workload profiles that offer more CPU and memory if needed.
If you're using Azure Resource Manager API version 2022-06-01-preview or 2022-11-01-preview to manage Azure Container Apps, please update your API requests to use version 2023-04-01-preview or later.
You can now use Azure Key Vault references to access your secrets in Azure Container Apps.
Azure Container Apps now supports sticky sessions.
You can now mount secrets as volumes in Azure Container Apps.
You can now use init containers with Azure Container Apps in production.
You can now mount secrets as volumes in Azure Container Apps.
You can now use managed certificates with Azure Container Apps
Run workloads that perform a task for a finite duration and exit, and schedule these workloads or run them in response to events.
You can now have separate containers that run before application containers are started in a replica and can perform all of the initialization logic.
You can now enable CORS for your Azure Container App through the portal or CLI.
Use an Azure Pipelines task to build and deploy to Azure Container Apps.
Use a GitHub action to build and deploy to Azure Container Apps.
You can now restrict inbound traffic by IP without using a custom solution.
You can now enable session affinity without writing code.
You can now expose arbitrary TCP ports from your container apps.
You can now source Container Apps secrets values from Azure Key Vault
You can now use Azure Container Apps in Azure China.
You can now run your apps using serverless, consumption-based compute, and optionally run your apps on dedicated workload profiles that offer more CPU and memory if needed.
You can now define UDRs to manage how outbound traffic is routed for your container app environment’s subnet
Persist data in Azure Container Apps via mounted volumes.
You can now choose different destinations for your Azure Container Apps logs
You can now build application logic in azure function apps which can be driven by the data from Azure SQL database.
You can use .NET 7.0 to write Durable Functions in the isolated worker model.
You can now restrict inbound traffic to your Azure Container Apps by IP without using a custom solution.
Azure Container Apps now supports, in public preview, a new GitHub action that builds and deploys container apps from GitHub Actions workflows.
You can now use a new Azure Pipelines task to build and deploy container apps from Azure DevOps.
Azure Container Apps now supports building container images from source code without a Dockerfile.
Azure Container Apps now supports exposing container apps that use a TCP-based protocol other than HTTP or HTTPS.
Azure Container Apps now support using Azure Monitor to send your logs to additional destinations.
Container Apps now provides support for using Dapr with Managed Identity.
You can now use Dapr secrets APIs from your Azure Container Apps and leverage Dapr secret store component references when creating other components in the environment.
You can now use Dapr release 1.8 with Azure Container Apps.
You can now use custom domains and secure them with TLS certificates.
You can now mount a file share as well as share data between multiple containers in Azure Container Apps.
Run microservices in containers without managing infrastructure.
You can now connect to a container console and use live log streaming for testing and diagnosis.
Use configured identify providers to sign in to your container apps by writing little or no code.
You can now use readiness, liveness, and startup probes in your Azure Container Apps.
You can now view metrics for your Azure Container Apps and setup alerts for metric thresholds and Log Analytic queries.
You can now deploy and manage Azure Container Apps from Visual Studio Code.
You can now publish .NET Core applications to Azure Container Apps from Visual Studio 2022 Preview 2.
You can now use managed identities with Azure Container Apps instead of passing secrets in connection strings.
Start deploying Azure Container Apps into your own Azure virtual netowrks.