In this presentation we will discuss:
1) Webscale and implications on enterprise architectures.
2) The old Datacenter vs the New Cloud
3) The seven key trends and technologies
4) Architecture Patterns
5)Putting it all together..
This presentation was delivered by:
Vamsi Chemitiganti
Chief Solutions Architect, Red Hat – NA East and FSI
1. Toronto
June 18 2014
PERSPECTIVES ON ENTERPRISE
ARCHITECTURES
Vamsi Chemitiganti
Chief Solutions Architect, Red Hat – NA East and FSI
2. RED HAT CONFIDENTIAL | BRAND2
Goals for this talk..
● Introduce webscale and implications on
enterprise architectures
● The old Datacenter vs the New Cloud
● The seven key trends and technologies
● Architecture Patterns..
● Putting it all together..
3. 1960-1980
§
Millions of users
§
Thousands of apps
2005-2020+
§
Billions of Users
§
Millions of Apps
§
10x Servers, 14x Storage
§
Trillions of Things
§
Industry Solutions1980-2005
§
100s of Millions of Users
§
Tens of Thousands of Apps
A “Once Every 20-25 Year” Shift…
3
4. RED HAT CONFIDENTIAL | BRAND4
What is Web Scale Architecture?
● Technology decisions to realize business goals
● Architecture that supports a massive number of users
● Supports a highly efficient & end to end automated
infrastructure
● Automatically scales up or down from a capacity,business
process perspective
● Service Oriented Infrastructure & Architecture
● Architecture supports continuous velocity of change,
embraces risk and promotes Dev-Ops collaboration
● Typically built on Open Source
● Result in tremendous business agility
5. THE SEVEN NEW PARADIGMS
ACROSS ENTERPRISE
ARCHITECTURE
6. RED HAT CONFIDENTIAL | BRAND6
The Old Datacenter vs The New
Cloud (Private, Public or Hybrid)
Paradigm Old Datacenter The new Cloud (Private, Public or
Hybrid)
Infrastructure Proprietary OS/hardware & Virtualized to
some degree
Commodity hardware, just enough OS &
highly automated leveraging Cloud
technologies (IaaS – OpenStack), Config
mgmt tools & Hybrid Cloud Mgmt
Changing unit of abstraction Bare metal workloads, VMs VMs, Containers (Docker/LXC) and a
hybrid of both; Just enough OS;
Application development Packaged apps, monolithic technologies,
manual development
SaaS, Lightweight containers, Open
Source frameworks, fully automated
PaaS
Integration Tight integration, some usage of ESB Service patterns, loose coupling and
SOA componentry
Development Methodology Manual development DevOps (CI/CD) and Automation across
the stack
Application Agility Rules, Integration and BPM intertwined
with the application
Usage of Business Rules, Lightweight
mediation and BPM – embedded or
standalone
Data integration Brittle/ Spaghetti integration Usage of data virtualization, in memory
data grids, integration with Big Data
frameworks
This is another expression of our ideal—the core message.
It’s the same topic, but written in a way that is more conversational. It’s easier to use as inspiration for marketing material.
These are just two of what will be many, many variations and iterations of this messaging. We have a lot of different resources, from a copy and a BU perspective.
And that’s important—addressing each customer or potential customer with the message (or portion of the message) that’s appropriate to them.
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