IaaS marketplace, including Rack-space Managed Cloud, Century-link Cloud, Digital-ocean and more IaaS vs. SaaS vs. PaaS

JST Business Solutions Pvt Ltd 

Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS)

Infrastructure as a service (IaaS) is a form of cloud computing that provides virtualized computing resources over the internet. IaaS is one of the three main categories of cloud computing services, alongside software as a service (SaaS) and platform as a service (PaaS).


It has become a daunting task for IT administrators to determine which, if any, cloud provider is right for their enterprise. This exclusive guide walks readers through the benefits of using public cloud services, how to weigh the pros and cons of each cloud provider,

IaaS architecture and how it works

In an IaaS model, a cloud provider hosts the infrastructure components traditionally present in an on-premises data center, including servers, storage and networking hardware, as well as the virtualization or hypervisor layer.

The IaaS provider also supplies a range of services to accompany those infrastructure components. These can include detailed billing, monitoring, log access, security, load balancing and clustering, as well as storage resiliency, such as backup, replication and recovery. These services are increasingly policy-driven, enabling IaaS users to implement greater levels of automation and orchestration for important infrastructure tasks. For example, a user can implement policies to drive load balancing to maintain application availability and performance.

IaaS customers access resources and services through a wide area network (WAN), such as the internet, and can use the cloud provider's services to install the remaining elements of an application stack. For example, the user can log in to the IaaS platform to create virtual machines (VMs); install operating systems in each VM; deploy middleware, such as databases; create storage buckets for workloads and backups; and install the enterprise workload into that VM. Customers can then use the provider's services to track costs, monitor performance, balance network traffic, troubleshoot application issues, manage disaster recovery and more.

Any cloud computing model requires the participation of a provider. The provider is often a third-party organization that specializes in selling IaaS. Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Google Cloud Platform (GCP) are examples of independent IaaS providers. A business might also opt to deploy a private cloud, becoming its own provider of infrastructure services.

IaaS pros and cons

Organizations choose IaaS because it is often easier, faster and more cost-efficient to operate a workload without having to buy, manage and support the underlying infrastructure. With IaaS, a business can simply rent or lease that infrastructure from another business.

IaaS is an effective model for workloads that are temporary, experimental or that change unexpectedly. For example, if a business is developing a new software product, it might be more cost-effective to host and test the application using an IaaS provider. Once the new software is tested and refined, the business can remove it from the IaaS environment for a more traditional, in-house deployment. Conversely, the business could commit that piece of software to a long-term IaaS deployment, where the costs of a long-term commitment may be less.

In general, IaaS customers pay on a per use basis, typically by the hour, week or month. Some IaaS providers also charge customers based on the amount of virtual machine space they use. This pay-as-you-go model eliminates the capital expense of deploying in-house hardware and software.

When a business cannot use third-party providers, a private cloud built on premises can still offer the control and scalability of IaaS -- though the cost benefits no longer apply.

Despite its flexible, pay-as-you-go model, IaaS billing can be a problem for some businesses. Cloud billing is extremely granular, and it is broken out to reflect the precise usage of services. It is common for users to experience sticker shock -- or finding costs to be higher than expected -- when reviewing the bills for every resource and service involved in an application deployment. Users should monitor their IaaS environments and bills closely to understand how IaaS is being used, and to avoid being charged for unauthorized services.

Insight is another common problem for IaaS users. Because IaaS providers own the infrastructure, the details of their infrastructure configuration and performance are rarely transparent to IaaS users. This lack of transparency can make systems management and monitoring more difficult for users.

IaaS users are also concerned about service resilience. The workload's availability and performance is highly dependent on the provider. If an IaaS provider experiences network bottlenecks or any form of internal or external downtime, the users' workloads will be affected. In addition, because IaaS is a multi-tenant architecture, the noisy neighbor issue can negatively impact users' workloads.

IaaS vs. SaaS vs. PaaS

IaaS is only one of several cloud computing models, and it is complemented by alternative models that include PaaS and SaaS.

PaaS builds on the IaaS model because, in addition to the underlying infrastructure components, providers host, manage and offer operating systems, middleware and other runtimes for cloud users. While PaaS simplifies workload deployment, it also restricts a business's flexibility to create the environment that they want.

With SaaS, providers host, manage and offer the entire infrastructure, as well as applications, for users. A SaaS user does not need to install anything; he or she simply logs in and uses the provider's application, which runs on the provider's infrastructure. Users have some ability to configure the way that the application works and which users are authorized to use it, but the SaaS provider is responsible for everything else.

Major IaaS vendors and products

There are many examples of IaaS vendors and products. AWS offers storage services such as Simple Storage Services (S3) and Glacier, as well as compute services, including its Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2). GCP offers storage and compute services through Google Compute Engine (GCE), as does Microsoft Azure.


What are the biggest benefits, and challenges, you saw with IaaS adoption?

Join the Discussion

These are just a tiny sample of the broad range of services offered by major IaaS providers. Services can include serverless functions, such as AWS Lambda, Azure Functions or Google Cloud Functions; database access; big data compute environments; monitoring; logging.

There are also many other smaller, or more niche players in the IaaS marketplace, including Rackspace Managed Cloud, CenturyLink Cloud, DigitalOcean and more.

Users will need to carefully consider the services, reliability and costs before choosing a provider -- and be ready to select an alternate provider and to redeploy to the alternate infrastructure if necessary.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Bus Network Client-server Firewall Intranet ISDN LAN Node DNS Proxy server Peer-to-peer TCP/IP WAN Router Star Network Token Ring

Web Development – from simple to complex e-commerce platforms | Mobile Development apps – iOS and Android | e-Commerce websites – WooCommerce, Magento, Shopify | Design, including prototyping, UX/UI, product design, and MVP. | Outsourcing & remote development of Python, PHP, C++, Java, AngularJS, React/React Native, Ruby, Android developers for a fixed time or per project.

Free Computer Training After 12th or Graduations