estrat aws cloud breakfast
TRANSCRIPT
Agenda
ABOUT US
A FEW WORDS ABOUT CLOUD
MINEMAN
PRESENT GROUP
AMAZON WEB SERVICES –WHAT THE FUTURE HOLDS
Q&A PANEL
CLOSE
Cloud FactsCloud is mainstream now and here to stay!
• Cloud is someone else’s computer – At scale!
• ‘Utility’ Computing – Pay per use if and when required
• Reason not always cost
• Guiding principles for adoption
“IDC predicts that the greater cloud spending (cloud services and IT products) will exceed $500 billion by 2020”
Cloud Continuum
Development
Community
‘As A Service’
Subscription
Software
Shadow IT
Enterprise AdoptionDev/Test
Backup & DROverflow
Non Critical Production
Cloud First
Production Systems
Build for Cloud
Orchestration
Industry 4.0
IoT
Big Data
Analytics
Typical Adoption Process
TriggerAnalyse &
DesignFeasibility
ReviewFinancial
ModelRealisation
Hardware Refresh
Contract Expiry
Cost Pressure
Direction from Top
Business ‘Revolutionaries’
Volume of Compute & Store
Identify Workloads
DR/Backup as a Service
Art of the Possible
Application Performance
Data Sovereignty
Movements of Workloads
Governance
Roles and Skills
Understand Internal Cost
Stable vs. On Demand
Workloads
Communication Cost
DC Cost Savings
Business Case
PoC
Stress Test
Adjust Model
Move to Production
Continuous Improvement
From “the Trenches”New paradigm for IT
• Consumer of services
• ’Soft Issues’ - New roles in IT
• Continuous improvement
• Be frugal and change your capacity management
• Get your governance right
MINEMAN – Our Business
• Overview• Legacy infrastructure
• Business Model
• Why Change?• Technical drivers
• Flexibility
• Cost
MINEMAN – The Project
• POC• Goals
• Engagement with estrat
• Go-live
• Outcomes• Reviewing our goals
• Additions
• Compliance
MINEMAN – Next Steps
• Shutdown the legacy environment
• Migration of the UK data center
• Future regions
• Additional Services
About Present Group
• Founded in 1998 in Perth, Western Australia.
• Present Group helps companies commission and complete projects.
• Services include inspecting, testing, commissioning, handing over, starting up, ramping up, optimizing, operating, maintaining, shutting down, and decommissioning projects.
• Present Group has offices in several Australian capital cities & Singapore.
• The business’s clients include prominent companies such as Rio Tinto, Xstrata, and Origin, and Present Group has completed projects at power stations, refineries, mines, and ports.
The Challenge
• Started operations running a data centre in the Perth office.
• Virtualized to improve server utilization and minimize environmental footprint.
• Upkeep of data centre proved expensive and time-consuming.
• Explored cloud computing with consumption-based pricing model.
• Ensuring the reliability & availability for business-critical systems.
• Failed to achieve elasticity which is intrinsic to the cloud.
• The business could not add capacity to support demand peaks.
Why AWS?
• Evaluated providers but AWS could best meet our requirements.
• Concerned about migrating Epicor ERP to the cloud.
• Carefully evaluated the benefits of moving to AWS.
• The business required true cloud that could deliver: The ability to provide consumption-based computing.
Economies of scale, and the availability of information.
• Dedicated support from AWS account and technical teams.
• Ease of transition without needing to re-architect systems.
Why AWS? – cont’d
• Established a direct connection between hosted environment and AWS.
• Replication software used to build a live replica of our ERP in AWS.
• Infrastructure is distributed across multiple Amazon VPCs, with Sophos UTM.
• 31 Amazon EC2 instances run in the VPC, distributed across two AWS AZ’s.
• Instances are set to auto-recover in the event of a problem.
• File-level backup for SQL and Epicor ERP databases to Amazon S3 buckets.
Why AWS? – cont’d
• Automated snapshots of instances daily and weekly.
• Web domains hosted with Amazon Route 53.
• Amazon Cloud Watch to monitor applications such as the ERP.
• Developed internal skills in AWS with system administrators training.
• Using AWS Business Support for increased response times & range of channels.
The Benefits
• Achieved a range of benefits from AWS, including increased performance.
• Improved ERP database performance & no disruption to month-end processes.
• Reaped big financial rewards by automating shutdown of unused instances.
• 30 percent reduction in operational expenditure AWS on demand,
• A further 34 percent by reserving Amazon EC2 instances.
• Achieved increased availability & fault tolerance.
• SharePoint to AWS, maintain collaboration performance while supporting growth.
• Support the rapid on boarding of new employees because of the scalability.
Automation
• Traditional IT:• Manual procedures
• Scales with people
• Components from different vendors means no common interface
• Cloud services• Built for automation
• Common interface for all services (web)
• API interface for the computers
DevOps
• The “new” way of doing things• But is it really all that good?
• Mostly about culture• Teams working together• Taking responsibility for development, deployment and operations• Does not mean less accountability
• Does it count in enterprise companies?• Lots more off-the-shelf and less built-it-yourself• But the cultural learnings may be highly valuable
Serverless Computing
• Complete service abstraction
• Partly “event driven computing”
• Partly “X-as-a-service”• For whatever “X” is
• Concentrate on the task rather than the plumbing
Business Agility
• Agile is another term you hear from IT all the time• As with DevOps – cultural rather than purely process
• But cloud isn’t about Agile
• Cloud is about agility• Build services in minutes and hours rather than weeks and months• CAPEX is a thing of the past• Stop paying for services no longer required• Expand regionally with a mouse-click