Book Image

Edge Computing Patterns for Solution Architects

By : Ashok Iyengar, Joseph Pearson
Book Image

Edge Computing Patterns for Solution Architects

By: Ashok Iyengar, Joseph Pearson

Overview of this book

Enriched with insights from a hyperscaler’s perspective, Edge Computing Patterns for Solution Architects will prepare you for seamless collaboration with communication service providers (CSPs) and device manufacturers and help you in making the pivotal choice between cloud-out and edge-in approaches. This book presents industry-specific use cases that shape tailored edge solutions, addressing non-functional requirements to unlock the potential of standard edge components. As you progress, you’ll navigate the archetypes of edge solution architecture from the basics to network edge and end-to-end configurations. You’ll also discover the weight of data and the power of automation for scale and immerse yourself in the edge mantra of low latency and high bandwidth, absorbing invaluable do's and don'ts from real-world experiences. Recommended practices, honed through practical insights, have also been added to guide you in mastering the dynamic realm of edge computing. By the end of this book, you'll have built a comprehensive understanding of edge concepts and terminology and be ready to traverse the evolving edge computing landscape.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Part 1:Overview of Edge Computing as a Problem Space
4
Part 2: Solution Architecture Archetypes in Context
8
Part 3: Related Considerations and Concluding Thoughts

Overlay, underlay, and shared responsibilities

Should edge computing architectures care about the underlying physical infrastructure, or should architectures just assume that the underlay exists, has standard capabilities, meets industry norms regarding service-level agreements (SLAs), and is reasonably well-maintained, and then abstract away any details and differences?

Enterprises can continue to use network segmentation, which is an architectural approach to isolate the internal network from the rest of the internet. In so doing, it not only improves security and access control but also helps with performance by creating access policies that are enforced via firewalls. With newer technologies now, there are other options.

In this section, we cover different approaches to edge-friendly network overlay implementations. Along the way, we discuss how the overlay can assist with network-level application isolation and why that is important. By the end, solution architects should...