Wednesday, June 19, 2013

VMware Cloud Ops Blog: Workload Assessment for Cloud Migration, Part 1: Identifying and Analyzing Your Workloads

http://blogs.vmware.com/cloudops/?p=277

Wednesday, June 19, 2013 1:15 PMVMware Cloud Ops Blog: Workload Assessment for Cloud Migration, Part 1: Identifying and Analyzing Your WorkloadsVMware Blogs

Conducting a thorough workload analysis can make or break the success of a cloud strategy.

If you are successful with assessing workloads and placing them in the appropriate private, hybrid and public cloud environments, then this will help you fulfill your cloud strategy, thus helping you enable greater agility and cost efficiency. If your assessment is unsuccessful, then these benefits will be much harder to achieve and you could see higher costs, lower performance and unhappy customers.  Remember, success breeds success, so if you have happy customers who are realizing the benefits of your cloud implementation, others will be knocking at your door. If you are unsuccessful, the pipeline of customers will very rapidly dry up.

In this four-part series, I'll explain four main considerations that you should examine when performing a workload assessment. In this blog, I'll suggest a framework to use to classify workloads as potential candidates for moving to a cloud environment. My next three blog posts in this series will cover service portfolio mapping, analyzing the cost and benefits of moving to the cloud, and last but not least, stakeholder analysis.

Common Questions

When assessing workloads to identify candidates, I often find myself asking:

  • What criteria should be considered when determining what workloads are a good fit for a new cloud environment?
  • What is the best way to capture and evaluate the criteria with minimal effort and impact on a busy IT department?

A thoughtful and efficient workload assessment framework can simplify and streamline the analysis. Without the right methodology, it can be difficult to know where to start, let alone where to finish. The larger the number of workloads, the more complex the prioritization task becomes.

Here are common considerations and requirements that factor into a potential migration:

Business Impact:

  1. Take a look at the workload and evaluate its impact on your business. Is it a business critical workload? How does it affect and impact your company? Take the answer to this question and assess it against where you are on your cloud journey. You wouldn't want to move mission critical workloads in to your cloud during your first days after "go live" would you?
  2. For which application lifecycle phase will the workload be used (for example, development, test or production)? What are the different requirements for each environment?

Application Architecture:

  1. Is the application written for cloud environment? If not, make sure you understand the impact of migrating it into the cloud.
  2. How hard/expensive is it to refactor the application for new environment e.g. do you need to remove hard coded resource paths? What are the scaling considerations, can you already horizontally scale to add capacity by adding instances or can you only scaling up by adding more resource to a single instance?

Technical Aspects:

  1. What operating systems, databases or application servers are being consumed or provided and how hard will it be to also migrate them into the cloud?
  2. Do your database, application server and web server run on the same type of platform?
  1. What quantity of CPU, memory, network and storage are typically used/needed? Can your cloud implementation support this?
  2. What commercial and custom software support the workload?
  3. What are the dependencies or integration touch points with other workloads?

Non-Functional Requirements:

  1. What are the required service levels, performance, capacity, transaction rates and response time? Again, can your cloud implementation support this?
  2. What are the supporting service requirements?  Backup, HA/DR, security or performance monitoring?  Are specific monitoring or security agents required?
  3. Are there encryption, isolation or other types of security and regulatory compliance requirements?

Support & Costs:

  1. What are the support resources and cost for a given workload? For example, two full-time equivalent employees per server – how much does this resource cost?  Also, don't forget licensing, how does the software vendor deal with cloud implementations of their software and what are the cost implications?
  2. What are the operational costs for space, power, cooling and so on? What will be saved by migration?

One thing remains through all of this – the benefits of moving these workloads must always outweigh the costs and the risks.

To get started on the journey of migrating your workloads to the cloud, remember these takeaways:

  • Always think about how your workload directly affects your company. With a thorough review of each of your workloads, you'll know what changes to anticipate when you begin the migration process.
  • Make sure you're thinking in the cloud mindset. Before beginning the migration process, make sure your applications are cloud-ready. If they aren't already, make sure you have the proper strategy in place to bring them up to cloud-ready speed.
  • Be prepared. Not only do your employees need to know about these changes, but make sure your cloud implementation is prepared for the capacity (including cost) it will take your company to migrate to the cloud.

Check out our list of great blogs on workload migration and stay tuned for Part 2 of this series, where we'll look at service portfolio mapping and how to determine the target cloud service and deployment model for each candidate workload.

Follow @VMwareCloudOps on Twitter for future updates, and join the conversation by using the #CloudOps and #SDDC hashtags on Twitter.



New Linux Training Courses Address OpenStack, Enterprise Automation Needs

http://www.linuxfoundation.org/news-media/blogs/browse/2013/06/new-linux-training-courses-address-openstack-enterprise-automation

Wednesday, June 19, 2013 11:48 AMNew Linux Training Courses Address OpenStack, Enterprise Automation NeedsLinux Foundation Blogsamcpherson

It's graduation season and every day there are articles about the shortage of computer scientists. This includes a shortage of entry-level engineers, but also experienced SysAdmins, IT Architects and DevOps professionals in the enterprise IT market, especially as the market is undergoing a shift to cloud and highly automated IT environments.

In fact, in our most recent  Linux Jobs Report  the results show that Linux professionals with a depth of experience are being aggressively recruited in 2013, receiving regular calls from recruiters, and are garnering higher salaries than other tech pros. It turns out, the most sought-after Linux professional is the SysAdmin.

At The Linux Foundation, it's part of our mandate to train the next generation of Linux developers as well as a new generation of DevOps professionals who are highly skilled in Linux, cloud, security and automation tools. We have recently expanded our training program  to meet this need with the following courses: OpenStack Cloud Architecture and Deployment and Linux Enterprise Automation.  (We also have a host of other Linux SysAdmin classes that address the basics and more advanced topics like performance tuning.)

These new courses are designed to teach Linux pros how to build and maintain the IT environment of the future. It's about far more than mastering technologies like Puppet, Chef, Spacewalk, Gluster and others; it's also about knowing how to make the hard, smart decisions to support changing, complex technical challenges to support business needs. SysAdmins and DevOps are highly-valued members of the team who need to know how deal with a change in direction overnight. These professionals are increasingly involved in the most strategic business decisions.

It's important to point out that this is the new norm. The stakes keep getting higher and the pace of change will only get faster. As the cloud and the work for SysAdmins continues to evolve, these individuals must have the skills needed to adapt, change and push the boundaries of innovation. Our Linux training program aims to equip them to do just that.

The Linux Foundation training program is helping turn out the best and brightest minds in Linux: both on the development and the IT side. The SysAdmins and DevOps professionals who possess the skills needed to work in today's modern IT environments and who embrace the latest approaches to deploying, maintaining and securing servers will win in the job market. We hope you'll join us as we prepare for the future of Linux and the future of IT.

 




Technotes: Failed to Login after Desktop Lock Install

http://support.citrix.com/article/CTX137735

Wednesday, June 19, 2013 11:02 AMTechnotes: Failed to Login after Desktop Lock InstallFeed for XenDesktop 5.6
Not able to login to the VDI after installing Desktop Lock. It displays �preparing your desktop� message and then logs you off.



Technotes: How to Properly Configure New Host with HTTPS Certificate for XenDesktop

http://support.citrix.com/article/CTX138129

7 Top social media questions answered from our June channel webinar

http://feeds.ws.citrix.com/~r/CitrixBlogs/~3/iSyQHdpLrrM/

Wednesday, June 19, 2013 9:26 AM7 Top social media questions answered from our June channel webinarCitrix BlogsLori Serure
Partners posed a variety of great questions that I am sharing from our recent social media webinar, "Driving Demand through Online Engagement and Social Media". You can read about the agenda from my last blog Replay our webinar, "Driving Demand through Online Engagement and Social Media". Also, be sure to check out the recording at www.citrix.com/go/CSASocialMediaSeries. (Access requires logging into Partner Central.) Webinar Q&A Q.…

Read More

 


Tier 3 Object Storage: Powered by Riak CS

http://basho.com/tier-3-object-storage-powered-by-riak-cs/

Wednesday, June 19, 2013 9:02 AMTier 3 Object Storage: Powered by Riak CSBashoAlex Gutow

June 19, 2013

Today, Tier 3 announced the availability of their global cloud object storage product, powered by Riak CS. You can find the entirety of the release in our News Section entitled "Tier 3 Launches Global Cloud Object Storage."

In particular, we are keenly interested in the unique geographic footprint that Tier 3 maintains. In conversations with customers, press, and analysts, we frequently hear people discussing "geo-data locality." This phrase typically is used to express a desire to address regulatory compliance or to improve the end-customer experience through low-latency (in the case of mobile applications).

With the Tier 3 release, their geographic footprint — in addition to maximizing availability — leverages the inherent replication present in Riak CS to pre-determine the physical locations of specific data.

For geo-data locality, requests can be load balanced across geographies, with geo-based client requests directed to the appropriate datacenter. For example, US-based requests can be served out of a Tier 3 US-based datacenter, while EU-based requests can be served out of a Tier 3 European datacenter. For situations where not all data needs to be shared across all datacenters (or if certain data, such as user data, must only be stored in a specific geographic region to provide low-latency response and address privacy regulations), Riak CS Enterprise's multi-datacenter replication can be configured on a per-bucket basis so only shared assets, popular assets, etc. are replicated.

Basho



Tier 3 Launches Global Cloud Object Storage

http://basho.com/tier-3-launches-global-cloud-object-storage/

Wednesday, June 19, 2013 9:02 AMTier 3 Launches Global Cloud Object StorageBashoAlex Gutow

Tier 3 Launches Global Cloud Object Storage
New Service, Powered by Riak CS Enterprise, Delivers High Availability and "Geo-Data Locality" via Automatic and Instant Replication

BELLEVUE, WA — June 19, 2013 ― Tier 3, a provider of public cloud infrastructure and cloud management tools, today announced the general availability of a new, distributed object storage service with automated data center redundancy. Powered by Basho's Riak CS Enterprise, this service offers enterprises flexible, scalable cloud storage for files of any type and any size. Files – or "objects" – stored in Tier 3's cloud are automatically replicated to a secondary in-country data center. This unique feature provides native "high availability" that improves performance, reliability, and ensures that critical data will never vanish into the ether.

By contrast, most existing cloud-based object storage systems require additional engineering work to enable this automated capability, a burden that many IT professionals and developers would rather not carry.

"Object storage in the cloud has proven to be a best practice for real-time data backups and archiving. With the launch of this service, Tier 3 has added a layer of enterprise-grade capabilities on object storage, with automatic redundancy to a second geographic location," said Jared Wray, founder and CTO of Tier 3. "Partnering with Basho has allowed us to provide enterprises with a simple, scalable storage platform for their applications and data. Furthermore, this service will support data sovereignty scenarios for sensitive data."

Tier 3 offers the complete enterprise cloud – a growing collection ofintegrated services that includes virtual servers running in the public cloud, cloud management functions like automation and orchestration, as well asWeb Fabric, a platform as a service offering based on Cloud Foundry. The company operates nine data centers worldwide.

Object storage from Tier 3 is available immediately in its two Canadian data centers, with additional locations in the U.S. scheduled for next quarter. Rollout will extend to Tier 3 data centers in the U.K. and mainland Europe thereafter. Users simply pay monthly for the amount of storage allocated on Tier 3's federated cloud data centers, and may scale storage up or down as desired.

The automatic replication of data to separate data center also delivers on a growing requirement for enterprise cloud deployments – geo-data locality. This feature allows enterprises to pre-determine the physical locations of specific data. This can be used not only to address regulatory compliance, but also to improve the end-customer experience through ultra low latency.

To help deliver this new service, Tier 3 chose Riak CS Enterprise fromBasho Technologies. This advanced cloud storage software runs on top of Riak, a sophisticated open-source distributed database that provides extreme high availability, fault tolerance, and operational simplicity.

"Businesses are increasingly asking for options to meet their rapidly growing and diverse object storage requirements," said Justin Sheehy, CTO of Basho. "Tier 3's offering is powerful as it emphasizes enterprise requirements for security and resiliency while also providing the flexibility users expect from a public cloud. Basho is excited to see Riak CS' unique multi-data center replication perform as a core component underlying Tier 3's new global cloud object storage offering."

Customer Demand Fuels Development of Object Storage

As cloud adoption continues apace, so too does the demand for cloud storage. In a recent research note, Gartner predicts worldwide Cloud System Infrastructure Services (IaaS) Storage for end-user spending to grow at a 31% Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR), from an estimated $1.7B in 2013 to a forecast $4.9B in 2017(1).

Object storage is fueling much of this growth, since it is ideal for many enterprise scenarios, including hosting of multimedia files, data back-ups, archives, transfer of large files, and much more.

Product Overview

Highlights of the new object storage service from Tier 3 include:

  • Storage for Large Objects. Users may store any type of file in the Tier 3 cloud – images, videos, documents, database backups, archives, and more. The service supports direct uploads for files up to 5 GB, while larger files may be stored using multipart file uploads.
  • Storage for Public Files, Plus Permissions to Keep Objects Private.Users may host public files with object storage – for example, images used in web applications or downloadable multimedia content. For additional security, files stored in Tier 3 are flagged as private by default.
  • Geographic Redundancy & High Availability. Object storage from Tier 3 offers multi-datacenter replication natively, with high availability already built-in.
  • S3 Compatibility. Users familiar with S3 may re-use existing code assets with the Tier 3 object storage service. The company's API supports service, bucket, and object-level operations. In addition, object storage from Tier 3 is compatible with many S3 file management utilities.
  • Enterprise-Grade Security, with Key-Pair Permissions. System administrators may store collections of files in buckets that are protected with unique key-pairs. Admins can simply point-and-click to assign permissions to other users as needed.
  • Scalability. Object storage from Tier 3 can easily scale to any size desired.

Additional information on Tier 3's object storage may be found at:http://www.tier3.com/products/object-storage.

(1) Gartner [Forecast: Public Cloud Services, Worldwide, 2011-2017, 1Q13 Update], [Anderson, E., Bell, W. and others] and [2013, March 26]

About Tier 3
Tier 3 is a complete cloud management platform for mid-tier to large enterprises, as well as SaaS providers. To bring even more value to customers, Tier 3 has combined elements of the traditional enterprise cloud market with those of cloud management platforms. Tier 3's suite of cloud products and services include advanced management and orchestrationenabling our customers to run workloads ranging from simple development and test environments to the most complex and demanding enterprise applications. The Company is based in Bellevue, WA, with regional presence in multiple locations in North America and Europe. www.tier3.com.

About Basho Technologies
Basho is a distributed systems company dedicated to making software that is highly available, fault-tolerant and easy-to-operate at scale. Basho's distributed database, Riak and Basho's cloud storage software, Riak CS, are used by fast growing Web businesses and by over 25 percent of the Fortune 50 to power their critical Web, mobile and social applications and their public and private cloud platforms.

Riak and Riak CS are available open source. Riak Enterprise and Riak CS Enterprise offer enhanced multi-datacenter replication and 24×7 Basho support. For more information, visit basho.com. Basho is headquartered in Cambridge, Massachusetts and has offices in London, San Francisco, Tokyo and Washington DC.



The Cloudcast (.net) #89 - Is Linux the Future of Cloud Networking

http://www.buzzsprout.com/3195/98776-the-cloudcast-net-89-is-linux-the-future-of-cloud-networking.mp3

Wednesday, June 19, 2013 8:56 AMThe Cloudcast (.net) #89 - Is Linux the Future of Cloud NetworkingThe Cloudcast (.NET)
Brian talks with JR Rivers (@JRCumulus, CEO - Cumulus Networks) about the launch of the company and Cumulus Linux. They explore hardware-acceleration of Linux, integration with Chef/Puppet/Ansible, and the evolution of network operatiing systems and hardware supply chains.


Technotes: How CloudPlatform Handles Physical Deletion of Files from Secondary Storage when Snapshots are Deleted from it

http://support.citrix.com/article/CTX135172

Wednesday, June 19, 2013 12:57 AMTechnotes: How CloudPlatform Handles Physical Deletion of Files from Secondary Storage when Snapshots are Deleted from itFeed for CloudPlatform 3.0.6
This article describes how CloudPlatform Handles Physical Deletion of Files from Secondary Storage when Snapshots are Deleted from it.


Technotes: How to Create SSL Certificate for VDI-in-a-Box Virtual Appliance

http://support.citrix.com/article/CTX132235

Wednesday, June 19, 2013 1:08 AMTechnotes: How to Create SSL Certificate for VDI-in-a-Box Virtual ApplianceFeed for VDI-in-a-Box 5.1
This article describes how to generate files that will be sent to the Trusted Certificate Authority (CA) in order to obtain valid SSL certificate for VDI-in-a-Box appliance