Book Image

Hybrid Cloud for Architects

By : Alok Shrivastwa
Book Image

Hybrid Cloud for Architects

By: Alok Shrivastwa

Overview of this book

Hybrid cloud is currently the buzz word in the cloud world. Organizations are planning to adopt hybrid cloud strategy due to its advantages such as untested workloads, cloud-bursting, cloud service brokering and so on. This book will help you understand the dynamics, design principles, and deployment strategies of a Hybrid Cloud. You will start by understanding the concepts of hybrid cloud and the problems it solves as compared to a stand-alone public and private cloud. You will be delving into the different architecture and design of hybrid cloud. The book will then cover advanced concepts such as building a deployment pipeline, containerization strategy, and data storage mechanism. Next up, you will be able to deploy an external CMP to run a Hybrid cloud and integrate it with your OpenStack and AWS environments. You will also understand the strategy for designing a Hybrid Cloud using containerization and work with pre-built solutions like vCloud Air, VMware for AWS, and Azure Stack. Finally, the book will cover security and monitoring related best practices that will help you secure your cloud infrastructure. By the end of the book, you will be in a position to build a hybrid cloud strategy for your organization.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Software Hardware List
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Isolated/distributed application use case


This is the second most requested feature by enterprises. A single pane of glass for provisioning the resources in the cloud. This led to the creation of Cloud Management Platforms. 

While they are called management platforms, one of the most important features they provide is provisioning. The life cycle services they support start with provisioning. CMPs also provide an API of their own, which allows the enterprises to communicate with the CMPs programmatically, thereby integrating it with other enterprise applications: 

The APIs that are used to connect to the CMP itself are normally called Northbound APIs and the API calls being made to the various cloud platforms are dubbed Southbound APIs

The APIs could be of many types, but mainly, RESTful APIs are used in the cloud. There are several CMPs on the market as we have discussed, each of them have a specialization and a reason to exist. It's a good idea to compare these when choosing the right one...