Embrace cloud diversity and simplify application control

December 21, 2012

One of the more popular arguments made against cloud computing is a perceived lack of useful standards. For example, Dave Linthicum, the CTO and founder of Blue Lab Mountains, mentioned in a recent article:

…the notion that you can easily move from one provider to another without significant work and cost is largely science fiction at this point.”

While his argument may have a certain degree of technical merit, it still rings hollow. The growth of cloud computing shows no signs of slowing down: major providers display consistently strong growth. Analyst firm Gartner predicts worldwide cloud services spending to surpass $109 billion in 2012 alone. In fact, large enterprises willingly choose multiple clouds, and it’s illuminating to consider the reasons why this happens.

C24 Application hosting specialists

The entire premise of virtualizing your application infrastructure is to give you the ability to divorce your apps from your physical infrastructure on which they are hosted. This, in turn, allows your application workloads to be dynamically placed and migrated across a pool of application server resources, which allows the infrastructure to dynamically adapt and respond to your evolving business needs. If you look at traditional applications and how they are developed, it’s clear they were not designed for the cloud, and they definitely don’t take advantage of some of the best benefits a virtualized infrastructure can offer.

Traditional applications are based on vertical integration. So if you want to move an app to a different environment, it requires a significant amount of effort and will most likely impact your other apps, simply because these apps are so tightly integrated. Traditional applications were not built using modern development frameworks, which would help to decouple these components from each other.Changes to one application, often has an impact on the other making them complex, static and brittle. These types or changes are often a major cause of service disruptions. Each change needs to be tested comprehensively, which is time consuming. In addition, traditional applications do not take advantage of capabilities provided by the cloud, such as the elasticity to scale up to serve millions of users. This severely inhibits the ability of the business to expand and integrate, new types of applications and environments.The assertions skeptics make are based on the observation that you can’t move a virtual machine (VM) from one cloud to another considering most clouds have incompatible VM formats. But what they miss is that your apps are not made up of VMs.  They are made of software!  So how do you move software around? Easily: in the same way you have been doing for years with agile development processes, configuration management and automation tools, deployment blueprints, templates, installers, etc. If you can provision your app on one cloud, you can provision it on any cloud as they all provide the same basic building blocks – instances of an operating system or an application server that you provision on top of.

Each of the major cloud environments offers a unique set of benefits and differentiators. Users of AWS don’t choose that platform because they feel compelled to; instead, they choose AWS because it gives them flexibility and services for their particular application requirements. The very same user might select a private VMware-based cloud for a different application because, again, that application has a different set of requirements. Cloud diversity is a good thing because it presents developers a range of choices.

Blog 3a

So, yes, when discussing cloud diversity, you can have your cake and eat it, so long as you pick the cloud that is best suited to your:

  • Application and services, and it has the right technical capabilities that your application requires
  • Business and commercial criteria encompassing the cost imperatives and SLAs you need
  • Customer needs, including their geographical proximity, regulatory and data protection laws, etc.

At Riverbed, we see more and more of our customers considering cloud-based architectures as a means to transform their application business models, particularly those with fluctuations in traffic and seasonal demand. Essentially, our customers find that moving to the cloud gives them a competitive advantage, the ability to provide differentiated service offerings, and new revenue models.

Cloud computing isn’t limited to just a collection of virtual machines and storage you rent by the hour in a location far away from your data center. Mature cloud providers offer the ability to extend existing on-premise infrastructures into cloud facilities, creating a unified architecture with the benefits of instant infrastructure. Applications can span both, and users need not notice the difference.

Can I have cloud diversity if part of my app infrastructure is not software?

Here’s the catch. You’ve virtualized your application delivery infrastructure and have started to push some of your apps out into the cloud. But part of your app delivery solution is not software.  You have a hardware ADC that is critical to the correct operation of your apps and the vendor provides a virtual appliance. Neither of these are ‘software’ in the sense that they can be deployed anywhere.  How is this going to impede and limit your ability to truly virtualize and reap the benefits cloud diversity brings?

When everything is software, including the network and the ADC with robust and open APIs, you get into the realm of a truly programmable infrastructure model. A great way to look at this would be  the conventional jet engine of the cloud takes you supersonic, and the scramjet of programmable infrastructure then goes hypersonic.

Yesterday’s load balancers and legacy application delivery controllers are not designed for the cloud and to give you the type of diversity, portability, programmability and granular application-level control. The mismatch is clear.

Blog 4aA truly cloud-ready, software application delivery solution is what you will need to help you meet our applications requirements on any cloud. Such requirements include:

  • Enhancing efficiency and response times of applications and services
  • Improving availability between instances that span multiple geographic zones and regions
  • Solving latency problems with content optimization and acceleration tools
  • Ensuring proper protection using intelligent layer-7 inspection against known and unknown threats
  • Scaling resources to provide encryption and compression services without affecting performance.

Blog 5aOne example of a software ADC is the Riverbed Stingrayfamily. This new breed of ADC is natively designed for virtualization and cloud portability. As a pure software solution intended for the widest variety of deployments, the Stingray family enables a more flexible application delivery strategy and provides a common delivery and control platform that can grow with your business.

for more information on Riverbed please visit http://www.c24.co.uk


Three Ways to Save Big by Centralizing IT

November 29, 2012

Saving money is perhaps the most tangible and satisfying benefit to centralizing your IT. The savings come from fewer hardware and software costs, fewer IT managers flying all over in support of branch IT, and lower power, cooling, and space costs.

How do you realize the savings, and what challenges should you avoid? Read on for three concrete solutions and the Riverbed products that will help you centralize your IT while ensuring your peace of mind.

#1. REDUCE THE NUMBER OF DATA CENTERS

Start by concentrating IT resources into fewer, more cost-efficient data centers, while continuing to reliably serve users in all locations. You save money by cutting your physical hardware overhead, your software licenses, facility costs, and the IT personnel required to manage them.

Watch for these problems

You will want to watch out for two potential problems:

  1. End users will now be farther from your data centers, which will lead to higher WAN (wide area network) latency and therefore slower performance
  2. Without the right tools, migrating to fewer data centers can be a planning nightmare, and moving all that data can be slow and time consuming

What you need to get it done

You need two Riverbed solutions. First you need Riverbed Steelhead® appliances to accelerate WAN performance so end users get the same service despite being farther from the data center. Steelhead WAN optimization simultaneously reduces bandwidth utilization by 60 to 95 percent and accelerates applications up to 100 times.

Steelhead Family Overview »

Rayonier is a leading international forest-products company with 2,000 employees and offices on five continents. They consolidated data centers from eight to two, while seeing a 70-90 percent decrease in new bandwidth demand by deploying Steelhead appliances at 20 branch offices.

“Riverbed was the best technology choice for us to complete our data consolidation project worldwide,” says Adam Rasner, director of corporate networking.

Second, you need Riverbed Cascade® application-aware network performance management (NPM) solutions to:

  • Automatically map your environment prior to consolidation, which makes planning and execution far easier than manual solutions
  • Head off and fix any problems that affect performance
  • Identify new opportunities to improve performance over the WAN

Cascade Family Overview »

#2. CENTRALIZE BRANCH SERVERS WITH VIRTUALIZATION

Gone are the days when each branch office required expensive physical servers and onsite IT staff to manage them. That costs too much money to install, maintain, and support. Instead, save by centralizing branch servers with virtualization.

Watch for these problems

Just like in solution #1, performance is the challenge here as your virtual servers will be running over the WAN. Other problems unique to branch offices include:

  • Fewer or no onsite IT help for troubleshooting
  • Virtual servers cannot be monitored by traditional tools

What you need to get it done

For performance, choose the Riverbed Virtual Services Platform (VSP) on Steelhead EX appliances, which uses VMware virtualization to let organizations run their own applications as virtual machines directly on the Steelhead appliances.

For centralized IT management you will need Cascade NPM solutions, which lets IT managers troubleshoot from the data center — even into virtualized servers and networks.

Product Brief: Virtual Services Platform »

Biesse SpA produces high-tech machinery for wood, glass, and stone. The company has 2,300 employees in 30 branches worldwide. Biesse recently centralized key applications at its headquarters in Pesaro, Italy. However, bandwidth and latency issues hurt application performance and made real-time collaboration impossible.

By deploying Riverbed Steelhead appliances and the Riverbed VSP, Biesse has seen a 3x improvement in application performance, made real-time collaboration possible, and saved money.

“Designers in Italy and India are now working as if they are in the same room. You would never know that they were thousands of miles apart,” says Giuliano Capizzi, CIO.

#3. CENTRALIZE BRANCH SERVER DATA

In this solution you will store data centrally but project it back to branch offices for more control and reduced costs. That lets you:

  • Save 30-50 percent on branch IT costs by eliminating the need to purchase and manage storage hardware in branch offices
  • Back up data in the data center, which saves money both in branch IT management of backups (time, salary) and also by eliminating physical tape drives and tapes

Watch for these problems

Again, without the right Riverbed solutions WAN performance can be a problem, especially with data residing outside the branch. Equally important, you will need a solution that lets end users access data even during WAN outages.

What you need to get it done

Riverbed Granite edge virtual server infrastructure (edge-VSI) appliances separate storage from compute. Granite appliances let you consolidate data into the data center where it is centrally managed, while ensuring local performance for custom and write-intensive applications — even during WAN outages.

This unique solution enables widespread centralization and consolidation of infrastructure and data from branch offices into data centers, where it can be deployed and managed more efficiently, saving up to 50 percent in infrastructure and administration costs.

Granite Overview »

GeoEngineers eliminates branch storage

GeoEngineers is an engineering consulting firm with 300 employees spread across 10 offices that work on and share CAD files that are 720MB in size. The company relied upon two servers per branch: one application server that hosted DHCP and the file server, and the second server for backup.

Riverbed Granite and Steelhead appliances helped GeoEngineers eliminate the need for physical servers and storage at the branches, saving the cost and hassle of managing 20 servers.

“The combination of Steelhead appliances and Granite products allows us to eliminate physical hardware in the remote office and the associated maintenance costs, solidify a disaster recovery strategy for these offices, and have backup processes run by systems administrators,” says Mitchel Weinberger, IT Manager.


Our Experts Solve the Branch IT Problem—What They Found Can Save You Money

May 23, 2012

It is not good when an engineering firm has to fully equip 20 branch offices with expensive hardware and store up to 1TB of data in each branch. But for many companies that is the reality because operational restraints have made consolidation to the data center impossible—until now with the new Riverbed® Granite™ appliance edge virtual server infrastructure (edge-VSI).

The benefits of data center consolidation are tremendous

Consolidation to the data center lowers costs by eliminating branch infrastructure. It frees IT personnel for other important projects. Consolidation keeps data more secure and manageable. And it is much better for backing up data and DR planning.

“By consolidating servers and storage, eliminating local backup policies and procedures, and reducing if not eliminating local IT support, organizations that embrace an edge-VSI strategy may reduce costs up to 50 percent compared to traditional approaches,” says Zeus Kerravala in WAN Optimization Gives Rise to Edge Virtual Server Infrastructure (PDF). (ZK Research, 2012)

No solution for these situations until now

It has been an accepted fact that you cannot consolidate branch infrastructure into the data center when any of the following is true:

  • You have write-intensive applications
  • You create or manipulate large files or many small files
  • You need to access data even when the WAN is down
  • You rely on custom applications—especially those dependent upon local storage

“Too much infrastructure remains in the branch, and too many staff members are required to support it.” – Riverbed Extends from WAN Optimization to Edge Virtual Server Infrastructure (edge-VSI) (PDF) (The Taneja Group, 2011)

Why you can consolidate now

Now the Granite appliance edge-VSI approach changes everything. For the first time ever you can bring edge servers and storage home to the central data center—and, most importantly, end users in the branch will see no difference. That is possible because the Granite appliance addresses performance challenges low in the technology stack, at the block level.

Separating branch computing from storage

Indeed, with a Granite appliance IT managers can separate branch computing from data storage, eliminating the need to purchase and support storage traditionally hosted in branch offices. Users and applications in the branch experience local performance while data is consolidated securely in a central location.

Projecting large CAD and GIS files to the branch

At the aforementioned engineering firm, for example, large CAD and GIS files and slow WAN transfers meant too much infrastructure was kept in branches supported by too many IT staff. And local storage meant that each remote office had to be equipped with a backup server.

But with a Granite appliance they now store data in the data center and project CAD and GIS files from data center storage over the WAN to local offices without impacting the end-user experience.

Steps for adopting an edge-VSI strategy

It is easy to get started with the Granite appliance edge-VSI:

  1. Leverage virtualization technology by virtualizing the remaining applications in the branches
  2. Migrate these applications and data to the data center or private cloud
  3. Deploy the Granite appliance at the branch-office level
  4. Project centrally managed applications and data across the WAN to the edge-VSI infrastructure

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