Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Rick Fleming
HP Federal Practice Lead
February 2009
© 2009 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice
The Third
Generation
reach
The
Cloud
The virtualized
services
Web
information &
e-commerce
The
Internet “A pool of abstracted,
connectivity highly scalable, and
managed infrastructure
capable of hosting end-time
1970 1980 1990 2000 2005 applications
customer 2010 2020 and
billed by consumption,”
2
Forrester
“Everything as a Service”
Delivered by the Cloud
Backup
Management Apps
Search
Mobile Services
Email
Productivity Location-Based
Apps Services
Social
Networking Platform Storage
on
on Demand Infrastructure Demand
on Demand
What’s new?
New access: New capabilities: New connections:
everything is a multi-tenant information in
service software context
4
The cloud (r)evolution: solving
problems that current technology
models can’t solve
New access
EaaS
Existing apps
and Contract-
infrastructure Technology over the internet based
consumption
5 Mar 8, 2009
Massive Scale-out and the Cloud
Enterprise Class Global class
On-premise Hybrid/off-premise
Proprietary Commodity
HW resiliency SW resiliency
Clusters Grids/Cloud
Static Elastic
Value/
Cost-Center Shared storage Replicated storage
Revenue-Center
Facility costs Power Usage Efficiency
6 17 Decmeber 2008
Adaptive Infrastructure and Business Technology
Optimization enable an automated service
environment
Business outcome
Business outcomes
Technology-enabled
services
Business Technology Optimization
Enterprise-class Global-class cloud
applications services
Infrastructure as a service
Internally hosted
Externally hosted
Infrastructure Utility
Adaptive Infrastructure
heterogeneous, distributed
Infrastructure
Adaptive Utility
Infrastructure
homogeneous, centralized design
design infrastructure
Pooled resources -- shared Pooled resources -- shared infrastructure
Cloud Computing Defined
Cloud • What is the Cloud? Applications
On-Demand Applications
Applications are increasingly “click to run”
services that live in remote
Internet data centers – not on the
MIDDLEWARE PC or local server. They scale to
millions and use shared IT
DATABASE infrastructure.
MIDDLEWARE
IT OPERATIONS
DATABASE
PLATFORMS PROVISIONING
PROCESSING
BACKUP/ARCHIVE
STORAGE
CONFIGURATION MGMT
NETWORK
Benefits of Secure Cloud Computing
Stakeholder Views and Solution Aspects
Non-critical Non-critical
Variable demand Variable demand
W W W W
Shared High security and Lower security and
performance performance
W
transparency W W
transparency W
Some standardization Highly standardized
11
The Dynamic Development Environment
(DDE)
• DDE Overview. The Dynamic Development Environment (DDE) is
a free foundation service for HP-IT teams that provides multiple
development environments on demand leveraging existing HP
services and standards. Our model is fully-automated self-service
environment.
− A standardized development environment.
− A dynamic resource.
− A means to reduce hardware hoarded “just in case”.
− For development, debug, and unit test.
− Built on dependable servers and SAN.
• DDE Benefits
− Reduces number of physical servers required.
− Reduces the number of operating system instances.
− Quicker turn around time when provisioning aserver.
− Saving of server configurations for an application environment.
OpenCirrus cloud computing research
testbed http://www.cloudtestbed.org/
• An open, internet-scale global
testbed for cloud computing
research
− a tool for collaborative research
− focus: data center management & cloud
services
• Resources:
− Multi-continent, multi-datacenter, cloud
computing system
− “Centers of Excellence” around the globe
• each with 100–400+ nodes and up to ~2PB
storage
• and running a suite of cloud services