| By Thorsten von Eicken | Article Rating: |
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| August 25, 2008 06:00 AM EDT | Reads: |
13,606 |
Cloud infrastructure providers like Amazon are putting out the technology that the enterprise and SaaS providers need to move beyond testing the waters and take advantage of the Cloud today. The latest, and most important from the data storage perspective, is Amazon’s Elastic Block Store, or EBS.
Over the years we’ve witnessed a shift to hosted IT infrastructure where all the issues surrounding the physical plant are consolidated and managed by a specialist service. In the past six months we've witnessed the incredible rate at which cloud computing has really taken off and is now allowing businesses to shed the problems of ordering, racking and maintaining servers and disk storage systems. 
The public cloud is now knocking down the barriers to a broader business audience that has seen the advantages of “pay as you go” IT and not having to build or rent another data center. Why do that when you can instantly spin up 10, or 1,000 virtual server instances at a fraction of the cost? Cloud infrastructure providers, like Amazon, are putting out the technology that the enterprise and SaaS providers need to move beyond testing the waters and take advantage of the cloud today. The latest, and most important from the data storage perspective, is Amazon’s Elastic Block Store, or EBS.
In short, EBS is a SAN (Storage Area Network) in the cloud that works with Amazon’s existing Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) and Simple Storage Service (S3). One hurdle for many businesses has been the data storage and throughput limits for each instance. Now you can allocate a disk volume of 1GB to 1TB from what is a virtually endless SAN in the cloud, and attach it to an instance running in EC2. The volume is stored on redundant disks and has a lifetime that's separate from any instance on which it is mounted. This is important, as previously the data was lost when an instance was no longer used. Now you can unmount it, and later remount it on another instance. We’ll look at how to get very large datasets using EBS into the cloud.
The RightScale Dashboard supports all the features of EBS and offers a number of additional features such as configuring volumes to automatically be attached to servers when these launch and track the ancestry of a volume or snapshot. What does EBS enable? In short: traditional processing on large datasets and reliable storage for many servers. But let's look at these two areas one-by-one.
Published August 25, 2008 Reads 13,606
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Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
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More Stories By Thorsten von Eicken
Thorsten von Eicken is the CTO and a founder of RightScale and is responsible for the overall technology direction of the RightScale Cloud Management Platform. Previously, he was founder and chief architect at Expertcity (acquired by Citrix Online), where he directed the architecture of the company's online services, including the popular GoToMeeting service. von Eicken also managed the Expertcity/Citrix data center operations, where he acquired deep knowledge in deploying and running secure, scalable online services. He was a professor of Computer Science at Cornell University and received his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley.
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Jeremy Geelan 08/21/08 02:03:47 PM EDT | |||
Dr von Eicken will be giving a technical session at SYS-CON's "Cloud Computing Expo" (November 19-21, 2008) - a major adjunct to the 4th International Virtualization Conference & Expo being held at The Fairmont Hotel in San Jose, CA - in which he will distill the unique characteristics of clouds and describe how to best think about deployments in the clouds. |
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