The application I work on contains a web role: it's a simple web application. I needed to host the application in Windows Azure, so I created a web role. I actually want to know what these roles are for. What is their significance coding wise or storage wise?
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EDIT 3/3/2013 - updated to reference UDP endpoints, Virtual Machines, and more languages
EDIT 6/6/2013 - updated to reflect the discontinuation of VM Role, and update to web/worker role baseline OS images to Windows Server 2012
Good link by @Vladimir. A bit more clarification: All roles (web, worker) are essentially Windows Server. Web and Worker roles are nearly identical:
To answer your question about what to do with these roles: The Platform Training kit (mentioned below) will give you lots of good ideas and samples, but here are some straightforward use cases:
With a VM role, you can install and run software with very complex/time-consuming installations, installations that require manual intervention, and installations that can't be reliably automated. You must deal with OS maintenance in this case. Beyond VM Role, there are now Virtual Machines, providing cloud-based VM construction along with both Windows and Linux support. I'd suggest Virtual Machines over VM Role.With Web and Worker roles, the OS and related patches are taken care of for you; you build your app's components without having to manage a VM.
With VM roles, you build a complete Windows Server image, add the Azure hooks to it, and push the entire VM into the cloud (and then maintain the VM image over time).With Virtual Machines, you simply pick an OS image from a gallery, which gets created for you and stored as a vhd in blob storage. You then RDP/ssh and set it up how you like.
Wearing the architect hat, this is where it gets fun and interesting. You can run web services in a Web Role or worker role (and be able to open ports in either); You can host Tomcat or other web servers in a Worker role. you can choose to combine a website plus services in a single role, or split them into multiple roles for different scalability needs.
For a good start, take a look at the Platform Training Kit and start walking through the exercises.
Web roles in Windows Azure are special purpose, and provide a dedicated Internet Information Services (IIS) web-server used for hosting front-end web applications. You can quickly and easily deploy web applications to Web Roles and then scale your Compute capabilities up or down to meet demand.
I ran across this SO question/answer several days ago and I found the answers provided a bit over my head (I'm new at Azure and Web). I found this summary in the Azure fundamentals tonight which I thought was a good high level overview of the core differences between the worker and web roles:
If you're new at Azure development I highly recommend reading the full article here: Intro to Windows Azure
I hope this helps someone as much as it helped turn the light bulb on for me.