In doing some research earlier I came across the original definition
of a cloudbust. In meteorology a cloudburst is an extreme form of
rainfall, which normally lasts no longer than a few minutes but is
capable of creating flood conditions. Similarly in IT a sudden and
unexpected rise in demand can quickly overwhelm a data center. In
coming up with the term cloudbursting, Jeff has give a simple name to
a rather complex problem. At Enomaly this is a problem we've been
debating for awhile; How do you effectively enable a kind of cloud
overflow in a secure yet efficient manor?
Provisioning instances in Amazon EC2 for example is relatively easy,
moving live workloads across a wide area is not. In most modern
dynamic applications the idea of having a "hot cloud standby" or a
prebuilt virtual machine that is basically waiting in the wings would
solve a lot of problems. But in reality there are a number of
complexities that need to be overcome. These complexities range from
network optimization to secure data transfer & replication to load
balancing across geographically diverse hosting environments, just to
name a few.
To truly enable a capable cloudbursting infrastructure, I feel there
needs to be a common consensus on how this may be archived and by what
means. So the question in the short term is; what are some of the
practical approaches, technologies and architectures needed to make
this kind of hybrid cloud infrastructure feasible?
Please feel free to give us your two cents.
You can see Jeff's original post here >
http://aws.typepad.com/aws/2008/08/cloudbursting-.html
--
--
Reuven Cohen
Founder & Chief Technologist, Enomaly Inc.
blog > www.elasticvapor.com
--
Open Source Cloud Computing - www.enomalism.com
To truly enable a capable cloudbursting infrastructure, I feel there
needs to be a common consensus on how this may be archived and by what
means. So the question in the short term is; what are some of the
practical approaches, technologies and architectures needed to make
this kind of hybrid cloud infrastructure feasible?
Please feel free to give us your two cents.
I'm not sure who came up with the term, but regardless I think it's a
good one. I spoke to William Fellows of 451group this morning, he
mentioned the term several times in our conversation which gave me the
inspiration to do a little more digging. The article by Jeff was the
only result I could find when I did a quick search after the call. But
now that I think of it, I remember William mentioning the term during
his presentation at CloudCamp London back in July.
ruv
I’m feeling really old … these problems were solved and solutions built, last century. Most of these products and tools have pretty much been sitting on the shelf for over a decade, waiting for the industry to catch up.
@bill
I would be interested in hearing about some examples of technology
from 10 years ago that would enable this type of solution?
ruv
-Chris
| Chris, In general I agree, Jini is technology before its time. It is something that is "prematurely right". It is probably being used in a number of efforts like Sun's project Caroline and others who do not want you to know they are using it. I believe that GigaSpaces uses Jini. So, Jini is being used in the cloud. It will be interesting to watch the uptake with the renewed interest in cloud computing. -Paul --- On Thu, 9/4/08, Christopher Steel <cst...@fortmoon.com> wrote: |
The answer is they were too early. I first came up with elastic
computing 5 years ago, nobody cared. Now the phone rings off the hook.
What's changed?
ruv
| Bill, One reason that the technologies may not have been successful to date was the business model. Note the companies that you named, all hardware companies. When implemented correctly with an appropriate business model these technologies cannibalize the sales of their bread and butter, hardware. the simplest example is virtualization that increases server utilization. Today, these technologies are being used in quite a different way than any of the hardware vendors had forseen (or perhaps would have liked). The technology is cannibalizing their hardware sales and the value is migrating over to the services oriented companies like AWS, AppNexus, GoGrid, GigaSpaces, etc. It is the efficiency and flexibility that enable these services to undercut the pricing of owning a server of your own. Anyway, that is my rationale, FWIW. Regards, Paul Kamp pg...@yahoo.com 401-261-5421 (mobile) --- On Thu, 9/4/08, Barr, Bill <Bill...@Tectura.com> wrote: |
From: Barr, Bill <Bill...@Tectura.com> |
Nicely said.
r/c
Rent vs. buy, I get that. I don’t think some of the cloud vendors do, though.
From:
cloud-c...@googlegroups.com [mailto:cloud-c...@googlegroups.com] On
Behalf Of Paul Kamp
Sent: Thursday, September 04, 2008 10:07 AM
To: cloud-c...@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: Cloudbursting
|
Bill, |
-Chris
-----Original Message-----
From: Barr, Bill [mailto:Bill...@Tectura.com]
Sent: Thursday, September 04, 2008 1:41 PM
To: cloud-c...@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: Cloudbursting
| Or the solution is quite good but it may work against a certain parties best interest. |
Regards, Paul Kamp pg...@yahoo.com 401-261-5421 (mobile) --- On Thu, 9/4/08, Barr, Bill <Bill...@Tectura.com> wrote: |
From: Barr, Bill <Bill...@Tectura.com> |
One reason that the technologies may not have been successful to date was the business model. Note the companies that you named, all hardware companies. When implemented correctly with an appropriate business model these technologies cannibalize the sales of their bread and butter, hardware. the simplest example is virtualization that increases server utilization.
| I agree that it will be a driver only it will be a driver for a different type of company now. I am pretty certain that all of the cloud vendors will be buying lots of hardware and they will be pushing improved server utilization. This is a bit different than a single purpose built system which has been the primary driver of purchases in the past, though not the only one. Then again, this could be viewed as a re-incarnation of time sharing. |
Regards, Paul Kamp pg...@yahoo.com 401-261-5421 (mobile) |
| --- On Thu, 9/4/08, Dan Kearns <d...@thekearns.org> wrote: |
From: Dan Kearns <d...@thekearns.org> |
gerrit