Azure PowerShell Modules

Comprehensive List of Azure PowerShell Modules

This page provides a categorized list of all available Azure PowerShell modules. Each module offers cmdlets for managing specific Azure services. Click on a module name to view its detailed documentation and available cmdlets.

Core Modules

Module Name Description Latest Version
Az.Accounts Provides cmdlets for managing Azure accounts, subscriptions, and tenants. 10.x.x
Az.Storage Cmdlets for managing Azure Storage accounts, blobs, files, queues, and tables. 6.x.x
Az.Compute Cmdlets for managing Azure virtual machines, scale sets, and related compute resources. 7.x.x
Az.Network Cmdlets for managing Azure virtual networks, load balancers, VPN gateways, and other network resources. 7.x.x
Az.Resources Cmdlets for managing Azure resources, resource groups, and deployments. 7.x.x

Service-Specific Modules

Explore modules for managing various Azure services:

Module Name Description Latest Version
Az.Sql Cmdlets for managing Azure SQL Database and Azure Synapse Analytics. 3.x.x
Az.Websites Cmdlets for managing Azure App Service, including web apps and function apps. 2.x.x
Az.KeyVault Cmdlets for managing Azure Key Vault secrets, keys, and certificates. 5.x.x
Az.CosmosDB Cmdlets for managing Azure Cosmos DB accounts and databases. 2.x.x
Az.Aks Cmdlets for managing Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS) clusters. 4.x.x
Az.EventGrid Cmdlets for managing Azure Event Grid topics and subscriptions. 2.x.x
Az.Monitor Cmdlets for managing Azure Monitor alerts, metrics, and logs. 4.x.x

More Modules

A growing collection of modules for specialized Azure services:

Module Name Description Latest Version
Az.DataFactory Cmdlets for managing Azure Data Factory pipelines and integration runtimes. 2.x.x
Az.Databricks Cmdlets for managing Azure Databricks workspaces and clusters. 1.x.x
Az.SignalR Cmdlets for managing Azure SignalR Service instances. 1.x.x

The Azure PowerShell module ecosystem is constantly expanding. For a complete and up-to-date list, please refer to the PowerShell Gallery.