The Future of DBA: Adapting to a New World of IT -- This presentation reviews the forces, trends and analyst research that is shaping the changing role of the DBA, along with the new skills required from DBAs in the current IT market. (Key Terms: aDBA, iDBA, DevOps, NoSQL, NewSQL, MySQL, MongoDB, The Cloud, ScaleBase, Gartner, database)
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The Future of The DBA - Research and Trends
1. The Future of the DBA:
Adapting to a New World of IT
June 2014
2. 2
The Future of DBA: Adapting to a New World of IT
This presentation reviews the forces, trends
and analyst research that is shaping the
changing role of the DBA, along with the
new skills required from DBAs in the
current IT market
3. 3
3 Recent Trends in the IT World
1. Open Source
Instead of using Oracle and other expensive databases, organizations
have discovered they could achieve the same goals with open source
projects such as Linux and MySQL.
2. Cloud
Since the advent of the cloud, most organizations rarely invest in
expensive on-premises hardware. This has been replaced with
applications and infrastructure on demand
3. NoSQL
An easy and scalable database solution. One of the main
differentiation between NoSQL and MySQL is NoSQL’s schema-less
nature. With MySQL, the application always needs to be aware of the
data model of the schema
4. 4
The Two Types of DBAs
• Infrastructure DBA (iDBA) — responsible for managing
and administering the database
• Applicative DBA (aDBA) — responsible for ensuring the
database knows how to speak with the application
The world of cloud-based
application platforms has
brought significant changes
to these DBA roles…
5. 5
From Then to Now – The iDBA Role
Then: On-premises
• Support the infrastructure and ensure operations ran smoothly.
• Responsible for the data’s integrity, availability, and reliability — while
making sure the machines worked efficiently 24/7.
• Ensure backup and recovery — no small responsibility
Today: With the cloud
• iDBAs employed by the cloud service providers
• With the private cloud, the iDBA became the hand that
delivers database as a service (DBaaS) dictating the new
policy, where the administration tasks are now automated and
standardized
6. 6
From Then to Now – The aDBA Role
Then: On-premises
• Focused and is the foremost authority on data in the context of
application development.
• The main goal of the aDBA was (and still is) to make the
database optimal for the application, and conversely make the
application congruent with the database
Today: With the cloud
• The aDBA role hasn’t really changed much.
• Remain the advisors of the app, and guide R&D through the right
course of action when writing code and queries. The major
• Consolidated to include some iDBA aspects
7. 7
The Data Champion
• Today, the traditional separation between the application
stack and the infrastructure layer blurred
and the aDBA is evolving into an aDBA / iDBA
hybrid – the Data Champion
• With the onset of Agile, DBAs need to
– Take quick decisions on production
– Be Flexible
– Be innovative
– Have complete responsibility on production
8. 8
NoSQL, DevOps and The DBA Challenge
• DBAs make up only 5.5% of NoSQL users.
• Gartner’s conclusion that “DBAs are not part of the
NoSQL conversation” seems accurate
http://blogs.gartner.com/nick-heudecker/nosql-shouldnt-mean-nodba/
9. 9
NoSQL, DevOps and The DBA Challenge
• With the onset of DevOps-type roles, the System
Administrator and R&D positions have changed in order
to adapt to the new circumstance.
• It is clear that due to the game changing nature of
NoSQL, the DBA team must undergo similar changes.
10. 10
The NoSQL Misconception
There is a common misconception that NoSQL will render
the DBA position irrelevant.
This could not be farther from the truth:
“DBAs, intentionally or not, are being eliminated from a rapidly growing area of
information management. Application developers may be getting what they
want from NoSQL now, but cutting out the primary data stewards will result in
long-term data quality and information governance challenges for the larger
enterprise.”
http://blogs.gartner.com/nick-heudecker/nosql-shouldnt-mean-nodba/
11. 11
DevOps and The NoSQL Misconception
• DevOps are the “cool” cloud guys who promote the trendy NoSQL
revolution, in which the world is schema-less and much easier to
maintain, implying that DBAs are no longer required.
• The fact remains that data is the most significant IT asset for any
organization.
• There will always be a need for experts who know how to maintain,
backup, and secure data. Wherever there is data there should be a
database expert.
• The DevOps movement should not be about lack of responsibility;
but rather about engagement and communication between the
various software development parties.
• Developers, DevOps and Ops must recognize that the database
expert is crucial to the entire process.
12. 12
The Future of DBAs
• The fast-paced developments of the IT world are causing
significant changes to the traditional DBA role. In order to
remain relevant, the DBA position must adapt to the
changing times.
• The introduction of the Data Champion has been an
excellent start to the evolution of the DBA role into a
profession suited for the modern environment.
• The next step of DBAs must be coming to terms with the
impact of NoSQL, and adapting accordingly. As Gartner
so eloquently wrote: “NoSQL doesn’t mean NoDBA.”
13. 13
ScaleBase:
Become an iDBA while keeping all your aDBA skills
ScaleBase is a modern, distributed MySQL database optimized for the
cloud which deploys in minutes and enables you to scale out to an
unlimited number of users, data and transactions. It is a horizontally
scalable database cluster built on MySQL that dynamically optimizes
workloads and availability by logically distributing data across public,
private and geo-distributed clouds.
Contact Us
sales@scalebase.com
or
Download a free software
ScaleBase Software
http://www.scalebase.com/software/
Use your relational aDBA skills
and get NoSQL capabilities
14. 14
Start Using ScaleBase Today
Check out ScaleBase software
• ScaleBase on Amazon
• ScaleBase on Rackspace
Editor's Notes
The Future of the DBA: Adapting to a New World of IT
This presentation reviews the forces, trends and analyst research that is shaping the changing role of the DBA, along with the new skills required from DBAs in the current IT market
Open Source
Instead of using Oracle and other expensive databases, organizations have discovered they could achieve the same goals with open source projects such as Linux and MySQL.
Cloud
Since the advent of the cloud, most organizations rarely invest in expensive on-premises hardware. This has been replaced with applications and infrastructure on demand
NoSQL
An easy and scalable database solution. One of the main differentiations between NoSQL and MySQL is NoSQL’s schema-less nature. With MySQL, the application always needs to be aware of the data model of the schema
Infrastructure DBA (iDBA) — responsible for managing and administering the database
Applicative DBA (aDBA) — responsible for ensuring the database knows how to speak with the application
Then: On-premises
Support the infrastructure and ensure operations ran smoothly.
Responsible for the data’s integrity, availability, and reliability — while making sure the machines worked efficiently 24/7.
Ensure backup and recovery — no small responsibility
Today: With the cloud
iDBAs employed by the cloud service providers
With the private cloud, the iDBA became the hand that delivers database as a service (DBaaS) dictating the new policy, where the administration tasks are now automated and standardized
Then: On-premises
Focused and is the foremost authority on data in the context of application development.
The main goal of the aDBA was (and still is) to make the database optimal for the application, and conversely make the application congruent with the database
Today: With the cloud
The aDBA role hasn’t really changed much.
Remain the advisors of the app, and guide R&D through the right course of action when writing code and queries. The major
Consolidated to include some iDBA aspects
Today, the traditional separation line between the application stack and the infrastructure layer blurred
and the aDBA is evolving into an aDBA/iDBA hybrid – the Data Champion
With the onset of Agile, DBAs need to
Take quick decisions on production
Be Flexible
Be innovative
Have complete responsibility on production
DBAs make up only 5.5% of NoSQL users.
Gartner’s conclusion that “DBAs are not part of the NoSQL conversation” seems accurate
With the onset of DevOps-type roles, the System Administrator and R&D positions have changed in order to adapt to the new circumstance.
It is clear that due to the game changing nature of NoSQL, the DBA team must undergo similar changes.
There is a common misconception that NoSQL will render the DBA position irrelevant.
This could not be farther from the truth:
“DBAs, intentionally or not, are being eliminated from a rapidly growing area of information management. Application developers may be getting what they want from NoSQL now, but cutting out the primary data stewards will result in long-term data quality and information governance challenges for the larger enterprise.”
DevOps are the “cool” cloud guys who promote the trendy NoSQL revolution, in which the world is schema-less and much easier to maintain, implying that DBAs are no longer required.
The fact remains that data is the most significant IT asset for any organization.
There will always be a need for experts who know how to maintain, backup, and secure data. Wherever there is data there should be a database expert.
The DevOps movement should not be about lack of responsibility; but rather about engagement and communication between the various software development parties.
Developers, DevOps and Ops must recognize that the database expert is crucial to the entire process.
The fast-paced developments of the IT world are causing significant changes to the traditional DBA role. In order to remain relevant, the DBA position must adapt to the changing times.
The introduction of the Data Champion has been an excellent start to the evolution of the DBA role into a profession suited for the modern environment.
The next step of DBAs must be coming to terms with the impact of NoSQL, and adapting accordingly. As Gartner so eloquently wrote: “NoSQL doesn’t mean NoDBA.”
ScaleBase is a modern, distributed MySQL database optimized for the cloud which deploys in minutes and enables you to scale out to an unlimited number of users, data and transactions. It is a horizontally scalable database cluster built on MySQL that dynamically optimizes workloads and availability by logically distributing data across public, private and geo-distributed clouds.
Use your relational aDBA skills and get NoSQL capabilities
Contact Us
sales@scalebase.com
or
Download a free software
ScaleBase Software
http://www.scalebase.com/software/
Check out ScaleBase software
ScaleBase on Amazon
ScaleBase on Rackspace