Book Image

VMware Cross-Cloud Architecture

By : Ajit Pratap Kundan
Book Image

VMware Cross-Cloud Architecture

By: Ajit Pratap Kundan

Overview of this book

Over the past two decades, VMware vSphere has been known as the most trusted and reliable virtualization platform. VMware Cross-Cloud Architecture shows you how to design and configure Cross Cloud Architecture by using VMware Cloud Foundation and vRealize Suite with various use cases across private, public, and hybrid Cloud. This book takes you through everything from a basic understanding of virtualization to advanced aspects of storage and network virtualization, clustering, automation, and management. This book will be your guide to designing all aspects of Cloud. We start with the challenges faced by a traditional data center, define problem statements for you, and then brief you on respective solutions. Moving on, all kinds of virtualization and Cloud offerings from AWS and IBM Soft Layer are introduced and discussed in detail. Then, you'll learn how to design IT infrastructures for new and existing applications with a combination of Cloud Foundation, vRealize Suite, and vSphere enabled with VSAN and NSX. Furthermore, you'll learn how to design and configure high availability, disaster recovery, and apply an appropriate compliance matrix. Toward the end of the book, you will learn how to calculate the TCO/ROI, along with the VMware products packaging and licensing in detail.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Title Page
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Summary


As with most IT products and architectures, there is no single solution that perfectly fits in every scenario. Just looking at vCenter Server, we have seen that there are quite a few deployment topologies available to us, ranging from the basic embedded deployment, with its unmatched ease of operation-but which lacks some advanced availability options and architectural flexibility-to the multi-site with PSC HA mode and vCenter Windows Failover Clustering, providing the most advanced option for HA and architectural flexibility while at the same time lacking basic functionality, such as a supported backup procedure and being quite complex in daily operations.

So the decision as to which deployment topology to choose will always be a compromise depending on the concrete requirements and priorities that have been defined for a concrete environment. A final design decision for a concrete vSphere environment may depend on whether a higher priority is granted to ease of operation while maintaining...