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Azure Infrastructure Services Going Hybrid !
4/20/2017 Azure Infrastructure Services Going Hybrid ! Tal Sarid Principal Consultant Microsoft Israel Noam King Azure Lead Microsoft Middle East & Africa © 2012 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Microsoft, Windows, and other product names are or may be registered trademarks and/or trademarks in the U.S. and/or other countries. The information herein is for informational purposes only and represents the current view of Microsoft Corporation as of the date of this presentation. Because Microsoft must respond to changing market conditions, it should not be interpreted to be a commitment on the part of Microsoft, and Microsoft cannot guarantee the accuracy of any information provided after the date of this presentation. MICROSOFT MAKES NO WARRANTIES, EXPRESS, IMPLIED OR STATUTORY, AS TO THE INFORMATION IN THIS PRESENTATION.
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Going Hybrid?
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Windows Azure Global Presence
North America Region Europe Region Asia Pacific Region N. Europe Sub-Region N. Central – U.S. Sub-Region West – U.S. Sub-Region East – U.S. Sub-Region W. Europe Sub-Region E. Asia Sub-Region S. Central – U.S. Sub-Region S.E. Asia Sub-Region Land the size of this investment – it is many billions of dollars and the players in this game are already established. There won’t be a new player. It is less important to land where these things are – this is both an ongoing investment we are always looking at increasing the footprint as well as maximizing the density and compute power of the existing footprint and of course innovating to make sure this is as cheap to operate as possible (using ambient climate to cool, green power etc etc). Number to land: 15% of x86 compute bought by 10 companies 10% is bought by 5 Major datacenter CDN node West US, North Central US, S. Central US, East US, N. Europe, W. Europe, E. Asia, S.E. Asia Edge CDN Locations
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Hosting & Cloud Software Delivery
Hosting Models Business Model On Premises Infrastructure (as a Service) Platform (as a Service) Software (as a Service) You manage Applications Applications Applications Applications You scale, make resilient & manage Data Data Data Data You scale, make resilient and manage Runtime Runtime Runtime Runtime Scale, Resilience and management by vendor Middleware Middleware Middleware Middleware Scale, Resilience and management by vendor Slide Objectives: Explain the differences and relationship between IaaS, PaaS, and SaaS in more detail. Speaking Points: Here’s another way to look at the cloud services taxonomy and how this taxonomy maps to the components in an IT infrastructure. Packaged Software With packaged software a customer would be responsible for managing the entire stack – ranging from the network connectivity to the applications. IaaS With Infrastructure as a Service, the lower levels of the stack are managed by a vendor. Some of these components can be provided by traditional hosters – in fact most of them have moved to having a virtualized offering. Very few actually provide an OS The customer is still responsible for managing the OS through the Applications. For the developer, an obvious benefit with IaaS is that it frees the developer from many concerns when provisioning physical or virtual machines. This was one of the earliest and primary use cases for Amazon Web Services Elastic Cloud Compute (EC2). Developers were able to readily provision virtual machines (AMIs) on EC2, develop and test solutions and, often, run the results ‘in production’. The only requirement was a credit card to pay for the services. PaaS With Platform as a Service, everything from the network connectivity through the runtime is provided and managed by the platform vendor. The Windows Azure best fits in this category today. In fact because we don’t provide access to the underlying virtualization or operating system today, we’re often referred to as not providing IaaS. PaaS offerings further reduce the developer burden by additionally supporting the platform runtime and related application services. With PaaS, the developer can, almost immediately, begin creating the business logic for an application. Potentially, the increases in productivity are considerable and, because the hardware and operational aspects of the cloud platform are also managed by the cloud platform provider, applications can quickly be taken from an idea to reality very quickly. SaaS Finally, with SaaS, a vendor provides the application and abstracts you from all of the underlying components. O/S O/S O/S O/S Virtualization Virtualization Virtualization Virtualization Managed by vendor Servers Servers Servers Servers Storage Storage Storage Storage Networking Networking Networking Networking
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Computing Patterns 80% of applications will be in the cloud…
Compute Inactivity Period On and Off Growing Fast Unpredictable Bursting Predictable Bursting 24x7 Steady S M T W T F S Capacity Needed (Max + 20%) 80% of applications will be in the cloud… Gartner estimates by 2020: J F M A M J J A S O N D Capacity Needed (Max + 20%) Save 20-30% Save 60-80% One dimension of Cloud computing then is the aggregation of resources to share. One large pool at a cost it would be very hard for most even very large organizations to match. Another dimension of the economics equation made possible in the Cloud is to optimize the resources you consume. In traditional IT, resources like compute power, disk storage, database capacity are constained – it is hard to get them quickly and it is hard to change them. Because of the automation and software/programmable nature of everything we do in the Cloud – YOU have the ability to match the demand/supply of computing resources more closely than in the traditional model. Explain the 5 patterns – in 4 out of the 5 patterns – if you could match supply with demand more closely – you would save money. In the traditional model, we do a lot of work to establish what resources we need. Capacity planning, performance testing, scale testing etc so that we can make sure for a particular application, we always have enough of the resources we need. We go and buy the hardware and software and then implement all this technology and leave it there hoping we never need to change. Instead of the resource line being flat and all that waste – if we can get the resource line close to the demand line, we can save 20-30% in a given week for this sort of pattern… Imaging though a pattern, as many organization have, of an application that has this sort of demand curve spread over a year (click) Finally – you have to think about these potential savings across your whole application portfolio… The only group you won’t get much saving from is the steady state – but you will generally find this represents a small proportion of your portfolio Getting close to the demand line for an application is achieved in the Cloud because of the characteristics of the cloud being usage based, automated and elastic. This means that you only pay for the resources when they are being used, it is easy and quick and you can automate changing your usage at any time and even based on policy through capabilities such as auto-scaling, and of course you can do this both directions to easily add resources or remove them. On and Off (30%) Growing Fast (15%) Unpredictable Bursting (25%) Predictable Bursting (20%) 24x7 Steady (10%) Your Application Portfolio – What Does it Look Like..?
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Azure Demo
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What’s this Hybrid Cloud anyhow?
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Hybrid Clouds Scenarios
Private -> Public Public -> Private Public Extension to Private Sensitive on Private and other on Public Public as Backup to Private Private as a Backup to Public Dev on Public , Deploy on Private
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Hybrid DEMO
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MSDN Benefits $50 $100 $150 $750+ $1,300+ $1,850+
Monthly Windows Azure Credits SUBSCRIPTION LEVEL VISUAL STUDIO PROFESSIONAL WITH MSDN VISUAL STUDIO TEST PROFESSIONAL WITH MSDN MSDN Platforms VISUAL STUDIO PREMIUM WITH MSDN VISUAL STUDIO ULTIMATE WITH MSDN Windows Azure Credits included per month $50 $100 $150 Annual Savings first year $750+ $1,300+ $1,850+
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What’s next? Open an Azure account Choose your first scenario
Choose the technologies you prefer Do the math & Explore the options
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Q & A
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4/20/2017 3:08 PM © 2011 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Microsoft, Windows, Windows Vista and other product names are or may be registered trademarks and/or trademarks in the U.S. and/or other countries. The information herein is for informational purposes only and represents the current view of Microsoft Corporation as of the date of this presentation. Because Microsoft must respond to changing market conditions, it should not be interpreted to be a commitment on the part of Microsoft, and Microsoft cannot guarantee the accuracy of any information provided after the date of this presentation. MICROSOFT MAKES NO WARRANTIES, EXPRESS, IMPLIED OR STATUTORY, AS TO THE INFORMATION IN THIS PRESENTATION. © 2009 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Microsoft, Windows, Windows Vista and other product names are or may be registered trademarks and/or trademarks in the U.S. and/or other countries. The information herein is for informational purposes only and represents the current view of Microsoft Corporation as of the date of this presentation. Because Microsoft must respond to changing market conditions, it should not be interpreted to be a commitment on the part of Microsoft, and Microsoft cannot guarantee the accuracy of any information provided after the date of this presentation. MICROSOFT MAKES NO WARRANTIES, EXPRESS, IMPLIED OR STATUTORY, AS TO THE INFORMATION IN THIS PRESENTATION.
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Customers Portfolio of Hybrid Scenarios
Hybrid Cloud Scenario Example Apps First American (USA) Dev/Test Environment BizTalk ESB Dev/Test Ministry of Ontario (Canada) Disaster Recovery SQL/SP Farm Failover Universal Studios (USA) Burst to Cloud Azure SharePoint FIS with Master SP Farm on-premise Comcast (USA) Azure Media Services and StorSimple for data archiving CBRE (USA) Extending to the Cloud Built cloud ESB using Azure Service Bus Shell (multi-national) Extranet apps Hybrid cloud with back-end (domain) connectivity Telenor (Norway) Dev/Test Dev/Test for SharePoint Dutch Railways (Netherland) Data Sync Data from on-prem is synced with the cloud Nokia (Finland) Identity Federation Identity federation for intranet apps Dong Energy (Denmark) Mobile integration Mobile apps with backend connectivity to SAP
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Development and Testing on Windows Azure
Test/Dev VMs in the cloud 2 Leverage existing skillset to move test/dev to cloud 1 Azure Storage Sandbox Test/Dev VMs Saved Disk State 2 Hyper-V VHD Deploy P2V V2V 1 Data Non-Virtualized App Virtualized Application On-premises Connectivity with on-premises data and applications 3 5 VPN Tunnel 3 Talk to the “why” while building the slide Add the pilot scenario – trying things on Azure Common identity 4 Dispersed Teams 6 Windows Server AD 4 Common dev tools and frameworks for on-premise & cloud 5 Accessed by a geographically dispersed team 6 © 2013 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Microsoft, Windows, and other product names are or may be registered trademarks and/or trademarks in the U.S. and/or other countries. The information herein is for informational purposes only and represents the current view of Microsoft Corporation as of the date of this presentation. Because Microsoft must respond to changing market conditions, it should not be interpreted to be a commitment on the part of Microsoft, and Microsoft cannot guarantee the accuracy of any information provided after the date of this presentation. MICROSOFT MAKES NO WARRANTIES, EXPRESS, IMPLIED OR STATUTORY, AS TO THE INFORMATION IN THIS PRESENTATION.
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Example Deployment Contoso HQ (10.0.0.0/16)
Contoso Production VNet in Windows Azure ( /16) /24 /24 Contoso HQ ( /16) SQL Farm IIS Servers AD / DNS S2S VPN tunnels Contoso Test in Windows Azure ( /16) S2S VPN Device BRK Gateway Exchange /24 /24
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Our Journey Begins… Contoso HQ (10.0.0.0/16) Who Am I? SQL Farm
IIS Servers AD / DNS Exchange
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Office 365 Other MSFT Apps Your Custom IT App ISV App
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Login & Inbound Federation
“Your own app” Windows Azure AD Windows Azure Management Portal IT Pro Graph API Salesforce Login & Inbound Federation End User Box Access Panel (NEW) Outbound Federation Google Inbound for DirSync Account Sync (NEW) Concur
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Azure AD Fast Facts:
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Our Journey Continues…
User1 = User1 Contoso HQ ( /16) SQL Farm IIS Servers AD / DNS Exchange Azure Active Directory
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When to use Password Sync vs. ADFS
ADFS offers key features that Password Sync doesn’t How do they compare? Password Sync SSO with AD FS Same password to access resources Control password policies on-premises Support for two factor authentication * No password re-entry if on premises Client access filtering Authentication occurs in on premises directory (no credentials in the cloud)
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