As we trot, canter and then hopefully gallop through all the “Cloud” buzzwords, we will try to provide some context for their logical progression, and then the why’s and how’s of their evolution (yes, Darwin’s law applies to technology as well!)
Last time, we focused our attention on the “Private Cloud” – the mother of all Cloud Buzzwords. Her direct offspring are the variants of “Infrastructure as a Service” or IaaS
IaaS | Infrastructure as a Service (Iaas) is a service where the physical infrastructure (servers, network, storage etc) on which your applications reside is owned and managed by systems or hosting providers, whilst you still own (and are responsible for!) which is important, particularly in the light of GDPR) the data and the actual applications. |
BackgroundVery soon, the Private Cloud – particularly in its Co-Location manifestation – was almost overtaken by “IaaS”. Datacentre and Managed Services providers quickly saw the commercial, logical opportunity – as did their clients – of handing over the whole kit and kaboodle of a physical infrastructure (the hardware “boxes”) on which everything ultimately relies to “someone else” – in most instances a Managed Services provider renting space from a Datacentre or even the Datacentre itself. IaaS therefore means that the physical infrastructure on which your applications reside is owned and managed by systems or hosting providers, whilst you still own (and are responsible for!) which is important, particularly in the light of GDPR) the data and the actual applications. There are several “flavours” of IaaS. In fact, it is really up to you how far you want to go (and at what stage. There is no need for a big-bang approach). The main variants are “Dedicated” and “Multi-tenancy”. Dedicated IaaS Dedicated IaaS is not very different from Private Cloud – the main difference being that you are renting the kit rather than owning it. As part of the agreement, the IaaS Provider may or may not provide licensing for the infrastructure and can either wholly, or partially manage that infrastructure (i.e. be responsible for the continuous care, maintenance and upkeep that any form of technology requires, and fix problems when they occur). Multi-tenancy IaaS Multi-tenancy is one step further towards true “Public Cloud” (to be dealt with in our next Buzzword instalment). Instead of simply renting the physical kit, the IaaS provider will make resources – i.e. storage, processing power, memory, etc – available to you, to be “shared” with other organisations taking the same service from the provider. In this instance, at least the some of the licences will be part of the deal – Windows server licences may or may not. In simple terms, you will not be able to visit the Datacentre, walk up to a particular storage rack, and say “that is where my data sits”. Your data and systems could be anywhere on a collection of physical boxes (and will probably move around amongst those boxes a lot of the time). |
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Advantages of Infrastructure as a Service
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DisadvantagesNone, really. BUT – there are many pitfalls and risks to manage. It is essential to take a Buyer beware approach
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SummaryThe trend to “Cloud” is unstoppable – everything is driving you that way. However, for many of us it is a new world we are venturing into. Great care and the development of different skills are required. In the next instalment we will be dealing with the true “public Cloud” and the “Hybrid” or “multi-Cloud”. Happy (or not so happy) reading! |