Book Image

Building Hybrid Clouds with Azure Stack

Book Image

Building Hybrid Clouds with Azure Stack

Overview of this book

Azure Stack is all about creating fewer gaps between on-premise and public cloud application deployment. Azure Stack is the logical progression of Microsoft Cloud Services to create a true hybrid cloud-ready application. This book provides an introduction to Azure Stack and the cloud-first approach. Starting with an introduction to the architecture of Azure Stack, the book will help you plan and deploy your Azure Stack. Next, you will learn about the network and storage options in Azure Stack and you'll create your own private cloud solution. Finally, you will understand how to integrate public cloud using the third-party resource provider. After reading the book, you will have a good understanding of the end-to-end process of designing, offering, and supporting cloud solutions for enterprises or service providers.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Chapter 10. Integrating Public Cloud Services with Microsoft Azure Stack

In previous chapters, we talked about what is possible from a technical point of view and how to design and configure all the details regarding Azure Stack in a multinode deployment or development toolkit. With this chapter, we will try to bring it all together and design a solution and not a mere feature. As basically 98% of all Azure Stack customers have company services running in public Azure already, their plan is to design a hybrid cloud solution with some percentage of services from public Azure, some from Azure Stack, and some as a combination of both since a hybrid cloud solution will either consist of different cloud solutions or different cloud vendors. But all this involves some kind of internet connectivity, so we will not talk about hybrid solution designs within disconnected scenarios.

If we talk about all the different solutions in hybrid cloud, you may also think about adding third-party solution frameworks...