Azure Monitor Documentation: Setup, Logs, Metrics, Alerts
Healthcare organizations run mission-critical systems around the clock, patient logistics platforms, EHR integrations, dispatch automation, and real-time communication tools all depend on infrastructure that can't afford blind spots. Azure Monitor documentation serves as the primary reference for teams who need to implement, configure, and manage monitoring across Azure-hosted resources, hybrid environments, and on-premises infrastructure. Whether you're tracking the uptime of a patient transport coordination system or watching for anomalies in your billing pipeline, understanding Azure Monitor is foundational to keeping operations healthy and responsive.
At VectorCare, we build patient logistics software that connects hospitals, NEMT providers, home health agencies, and payers through a single platform. Our system handles everything from automated dispatching to real-time care team messaging, and all of it relies on robust cloud monitoring to maintain the performance and reliability healthcare organizations expect. That operational reality gives us a practical perspective on what Azure Monitor does and why its documentation matters for teams managing complex, integrated healthcare workflows.
This guide walks through the core components of Azure Monitor, setup, logs, metrics, and alerts, with enough depth to help you move from documentation to implementation. You'll find explanations of key concepts, configuration steps, and practical guidance for building a monitoring strategy that actually surfaces problems before they reach your end users. If you're responsible for keeping cloud-based healthcare systems running smoothly, this is the reference you need.
Why Azure Monitor documentation matters
Azure Monitor is not a single tool. It's a broad ecosystem of data collection pipelines, analysis services, visualization layers, and response mechanisms that work together across your Azure subscriptions, hybrid environments, and on-premises infrastructure. Without a solid grasp of the official Azure Monitor documentation, teams routinely configure monitoring incorrectly, miss critical data sources, or build dashboards that surface the wrong signals at the wrong time. The documentation is the authoritative reference for understanding how these components interact and how to configure them correctly for your specific environment and workload profile.
The scope of what Azure Monitor covers
Azure Monitor collects metrics and logs from virtually every resource in your Azure environment, including virtual machines, containers, databases, networking components, and application code running on all of them. The platform spans multiple services: Log Analytics workspaces, Application Insights, Azure Monitor Alerts, Metrics Explorer, and Workbooks, each with its own configuration model, data retention behavior, and query interface. Understanding that scope is the first reason documentation matters, because you need to know which component handles which data type before you can build a coherent monitoring strategy that doesn't leave gaps.
The official Azure Monitor overview from Microsoft organizes this scope into a clear architecture: data sources feed into a central data platform, and from there analysis, visualization, and response tools consume that data. That architecture model tells you where to start configuration, what depends on what, and which components you need to set up before others will function correctly. Without reading that overview first, teams often build in the wrong order and then wonder why their alerting isn't working.
What breaks without a documentation-backed approach
Teams that skip thorough documentation review tend to discover monitoring gaps in production rather than during setup. A common example: engineers enable diagnostic settings on Azure resources without first creating a Log Analytics workspace as a destination, so logs are technically collected but stored nowhere queryable. Another frequent issue involves misconfigured alert thresholds that fire on noisy, low-signal metrics rather than the indicators that actually reflect real performance degradation in your services.
Monitoring gaps discovered in production always cost more to fix than gaps caught during initial configuration.
Both of those problems are preventable. The Azure Monitor documentation covers workspace architecture decisions, data retention settings, and the recommended alert signal types for each resource category in specific detail. Reading those sections before your first deployment prevents the reactive troubleshooting that pulls your operations team away from meaningful work and toward scrambling to understand why your alerts are misfiring or silent when they shouldn't be.
Why healthcare workloads raise the stakes
Healthcare platforms handle data and workflows where downtime or delayed response carries direct consequences for patient care. A patient logistics platform coordinates transport, home care, and DME delivery in real time, so when a dispatch service degrades or an EHR integration drops, care teams need to know immediately, not after a patient misses an appointment. Azure Monitor, configured correctly according to its documentation, gives your team the visibility to catch those degradations before they reach the people depending on your system.
Compliance expectations in healthcare also demand more rigorous monitoring than many other industries. Audit logs, access tracking, and performance baselines are not optional in a HIPAA-regulated environment, and Azure Monitor can support those requirements, but only when you configure log retention, workspace access controls, and diagnostic settings according to what the documentation actually specifies. Treating monitoring configuration as something to figure out informally introduces both operational and compliance risk that no healthcare organization should accept.
Azure Monitor in plain English: data, tools, and flow
Azure Monitor works by pulling telemetry from your Azure resources, applications, and infrastructure, then routing that telemetry into a central data platform where you can query, visualize, and act on it. Everything flows in one direction: data sources feed the platform, and the platform feeds your analysis and response tools. Once you understand that basic pipeline, the rest of the azure monitor documentation becomes much easier to navigate because you always know where you are in the flow.
Where the data comes from
Every resource in your Azure environment generates two types of telemetry: metrics and logs. Metrics are numeric measurements sampled at regular intervals, things like CPU percentage, request latency, or memory usage. Logs are structured records of events, including errors, state changes, user actions, and diagnostic traces. Both types feed into Azure Monitor automatically for most Azure-native resources, but you control where that data gets stored by configuring diagnostic settings on each resource. Without those settings pointing to a destination, the data doesn't go anywhere useful.
Configuring diagnostic settings correctly before anything else is the single most important step in any Azure Monitor deployment.
Your applications contribute a third data stream through Application Insights, which is Microsoft's application performance monitoring service built inside Azure Monitor. Application Insights captures request rates, dependency calls, exceptions, and custom telemetry from your application code. You can read more about its capabilities in the Application Insights overview in the official Microsoft documentation.
How the tools fit together
Once your data reaches the platform, four primary tools handle analysis, visualization, and response. Log Analytics workspaces store log data and give you a query interface powered by the Kusto Query Language. Metrics Explorer lets you chart and compare numeric metrics in real time without writing queries. Workbooks combine queries, charts, and text into shareable reports that give your team a structured view of system health. Finally, the Alerts service watches your data streams and triggers notifications or automated actions when conditions you define are met.
These tools are not independent products you bolt together separately. They share data from the same underlying platform, which means a query you build in Log Analytics can feed a Workbook, and a metric threshold you identify in Metrics Explorer can back an alert rule. That integration is what makes Azure Monitor powerful once you configure it correctly from the start.
How to set up Azure Monitor end to end
Setting up Azure Monitor correctly from the start prevents the configuration debt that forces teams to rebuild their monitoring strategy after going live. The azure monitor documentation on Microsoft Learn organizes setup into a logical sequence, and following that sequence matters because several components depend on others being in place first. Before you configure alerts or build dashboards, you need a solid data collection foundation underneath them.
Create a Log Analytics workspace first
Your Log Analytics workspace is the destination where Azure Monitor stores log data from your resources, applications, and infrastructure. Without a workspace, diagnostic settings have nowhere to send data, and many alerting and query features won't function at all. You should create your workspace before touching any other Azure Monitor component, and you should make deliberate decisions about its region and access control model during creation rather than accepting defaults you'll need to revisit later.
The Log Analytics workspace overview on Microsoft Learn covers workspace design decisions including data retention periods, commitment tiers, and the difference between workspace-context and resource-context access modes. Choosing the wrong access mode for your team structure creates permission headaches downstream, so read that section before you deploy.
Getting workspace architecture right before you ingest any data is far easier than restructuring it after your team has built queries and alert rules on top of it.
Configure diagnostic settings on your resources
Once your workspace exists, you need to tell each Azure resource to send its logs and metrics there. You do this through diagnostic settings, which you configure individually on each resource, either through the Azure portal, ARM templates, or Bicep. Each resource type exposes different log categories, and the Microsoft documentation for each service lists which categories are available and what data they contain.
A practical approach is to enable diagnostic settings using Azure Policy at the subscription level, which ensures every new resource automatically routes telemetry to your workspace without manual configuration per resource. The diagnostic settings documentation walks through both the portal-based and policy-driven methods in detail.
Enable Application Insights for your applications
Application Insights captures application-layer telemetry that infrastructure-level diagnostics don't surface, including request traces, dependency failures, and exception details. You connect it to your Log Analytics workspace by creating a workspace-based Application Insights resource, which stores all application telemetry in the same workspace as your infrastructure logs. That unified storage lets you correlate application errors with underlying infrastructure events in a single query rather than switching between separate tools.
How to use Azure Monitor Logs and KQL
Azure Monitor Logs stores all the log data your diagnostic settings route into your Log Analytics workspace, and you query that data using Kusto Query Language (KQL). KQL is a read-only query language purpose-built for large-scale log and telemetry analysis. Once you learn its core syntax, you can surface the exact signals your operations team needs, whether that's tracking failed requests in a patient logistics workflow or spotting repeated authentication errors in an EHR integration. The azure monitor documentation on Microsoft Learn provides a full KQL reference, but building fluency with a small set of operators gets you operational fast.
Understanding the KQL query model
KQL queries follow a pipe-based structure where each operator receives the output of the previous one. You start by naming a table, then pipe the results through filter, project, summarize, or sort operators to shape them. The tables you query correspond to the log categories you enabled in your diagnostic settings, so if you didn't route a particular log type to your workspace, it won't appear in any query result. Knowing which tables exist in your workspace is the first practical step before writing any queries, and you can see them all in the Tables pane inside Log Analytics.
Every query you write in Log Analytics runs against real ingested data, so verifying your diagnostic settings are routing data correctly before building queries saves significant troubleshooting time.
The most frequently used tables for operational monitoring include AzureActivity for subscription-level events, AzureDiagnostics for resource-specific logs, and AppRequests plus AppExceptions for Application Insights data. The Log Analytics tutorial on Microsoft Learn walks through each of these with live query examples.
Writing your first useful queries
Start with a simple filter query on AzureActivity to confirm your workspace is receiving data, then move toward summarize operators that aggregate event counts by resource or time window. A query that counts failed operations grouped by resource name over the last 24 hours gives you an immediate picture of where your environment is generating errors without requiring complex joins or nested logic.
Once your basic queries work, build toward time-series analysis using the summarize ... by bin(TimeGenerated, 1h) pattern, which lets you chart activity volume over time directly inside Log Analytics or export the results into a Workbook. That pattern becomes the backbone of most operational dashboards, so practicing it early makes every subsequent monitoring task faster to build.
How to use metrics, workbooks, and dashboards
Azure Monitor gives you three distinct layers for making sense of your telemetry: Metrics Explorer for real-time numeric analysis, Workbooks for structured operational reports, and shared dashboards for giving your team high-level system visibility. Each layer serves a different purpose, and the azure monitor documentation treats them as complementary tools rather than alternatives. Knowing when to use each one stops you from building dashboards nobody opens and reports that answer the wrong questions.
Reading metrics with Metrics Explorer
Metrics Explorer lets you chart numeric telemetry in real time without writing a single query. You select a resource, choose a metric like CPU percentage or request latency, pick an aggregation type, and the chart renders immediately. That immediacy makes Metrics Explorer the right tool for rapid triage during an active incident, when you need to confirm whether a specific resource is under stress right now rather than running a log query against historical data.
You can layer multiple metrics onto a single chart and split results by dimension, which lets you compare performance across resource instances at once. Saving that chart configuration pins it directly to a shared dashboard.
Metrics Explorer is your fastest path to confirming whether a resource degradation is real during an incident, while Log Analytics is the right tool for understanding why it happened.
Building workbooks for operational reporting
Workbooks combine KQL queries, metric charts, and descriptive text into a single structured document that pulls live data every time someone opens it. Unlike static exports, a Workbook always reflects current data from your Log Analytics workspace and metrics platform. That makes Workbooks the right format for recurring operational reviews, reliability reports, or onboarding documentation that shows new team members what healthy system behavior looks like.
Microsoft provides a library of pre-built Workbook templates in the Azure portal that you can clone and modify for your environment. Start with a template that matches your resource type, remove panels that don't apply, and add queries specific to your workload. The Azure Monitor Workbooks documentation covers the full template library and authoring model in detail.
Pinning dashboards for team visibility
Azure dashboards let you assemble tiles from Metrics Explorer charts, Workbook panels, and Log Analytics query results into a single shared surface. You pin elements from each tool to a dashboard after building the underlying queries and charts in their native tools first. Treating the dashboard as a read-only summary layer rather than a primary analysis surface keeps it focused and useful for everyone who needs a fast system health check without digging into individual tools.
How to create alerts and automate responses
Azure Monitor alerts watch your telemetry continuously and trigger notifications or automated actions the moment a condition you define is met. The azure monitor documentation organizes alerts into three signal types: metric alerts, log search alerts, and activity log alerts. Each type suits different scenarios, and choosing the wrong signal type for a given situation causes either too many false positives or too much silence when real problems surface. Before building any alert rules, you need to understand what each signal type measures and which one matches the operational question you're trying to answer.
Choosing the right alert signal type
Metric alerts fire when a numeric threshold is crossed on a platform metric, such as CPU usage exceeding 85 percent for five consecutive minutes. They evaluate quickly, typically within one minute, which makes them the right choice for catching active resource stress. Log search alerts run a KQL query on a scheduled interval and trigger when the query returns results that match your defined criteria, making them better suited for detecting patterns across multiple data sources, like repeated failed authentication attempts or a spike in dispatch errors across a specific service tier.
Activity log alerts cover a third category: subscription-level events like resource deletions, role assignments, or service health notifications. For healthcare platforms where audit trails matter, activity log alerts give you immediate notification when someone modifies a resource in a way that could affect compliance posture or system behavior. You configure all three types through the same Alerts blade in the Azure portal, but each type exposes different configuration fields that reflect how its underlying signal works.
Picking the wrong alert signal type is the most common reason alert rules generate noise instead of actionable notifications.
Connecting alerts to action groups
An action group defines what happens when an alert fires: who gets notified and through which channel, and whether any automated response runs. You create action groups independently of alert rules, which lets you reuse the same group across multiple alert rules rather than rebuilding notification lists for every rule you create. A single action group can send email and SMS notifications, call a webhook, trigger an Azure Function, or kick off a Logic App workflow depending on the response your situation requires.
You attach an action group to an alert rule during rule creation or by editing an existing rule. For automated remediation scenarios, connecting an alert to an Azure Automation runbook through an action group lets your system respond to detected conditions without manual intervention, which is exactly the kind of hands-off reliability healthcare operations teams need when issues surface outside business hours.
Wrap-up and what to do next
Azure Monitor is a layered system, and the azure monitor documentation gives you the foundation to build every layer correctly: workspace setup, diagnostic settings, KQL queries, workbooks, and alert rules that fire on the right signals. Working through each component in order prevents the configuration gaps that show up as silent failures or noisy false alarms once your system goes live. Your monitoring strategy is only as strong as the data you're collecting and the rules you've defined to act on it.
Healthcare platforms carry operational stakes that most cloud environments don't. When your patient logistics workflows depend on real-time coordination across transportation, home care, and equipment delivery, visibility gaps translate directly into service failures. If you're looking for a platform built with that operational reality in mind, explore what VectorCare does for patient logistics and see how monitoring-ready infrastructure supports reliable, connected care.













