1. Lucas A. Romão
Windows Azure Specialist
Microsoft
IaaS noWindows Azure
O que é possível fazer?
2. Agenda
• Intro Cloud Computing
• Intro Windows Azure
• Intro WA VMs
• Criar Networking
• Criar VM com WS2K12
• Fazer Web Deploy
• Criar VM com Linux
14. Imagens Disponíveis na Galeria
Microsoft
Windows Server 2008 R2
SQL Server Eval 2012
Windows Server 2012
Biztalk Server 2013 Beta
Open Source
OpenSUSE 12.2
CentOS 6.3
Ubuntu 12.04/12.10
SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 11 SP2
Slide Objectives:Describe the various computing patterns that are good for Cloud ComputingSpeaking Points:There are numerous terms and definitions floating around in the industry for “the cloud”, “cloud computing”, “cloud services”, etc.Microsoft thinks of the cloud as simply an approach to computing that enables applications to be delivered at scale for a variety of workloads and client devices.The cloud can help deliver IT as a standardized service…freeing you up to focus on your businessCover the workloads in the slide
Slide Objectives:Explain the three established terms in the industry for cloud servicesSpeaking Points:With this in mind, it’s important to understand how to talk about our Cloud Services offerings.There is a lot of confusion in the industry when it comes to the cloud. It’s important that you understand both what is happening in the industry and how we think about the cloud. This is the most commonly used taxonomy for differentiating between types of cloud services.The industry has defined three categories of services:IaaS – a set of infrastructure level capabilities such as an operating system, network connectivity, etc. that are delivered as pay for use services and can be used to host applications. PaaS – higher level sets of functionality that are delivered as consumable services for developers who are building applications. PaaS is about abstracting developers from the underlying infrastructure to enable applications to quickly be composed. SaaS – applications that are delivered using a service delivery model where organizations can simply consume and use the application. Typically an organization would pay for the use of the application or the application could be monetized through ad revenue. It is important to note that these 3 types of services may exist independently of one another or combined with one another. SaaS offerings needn’t be developed upon PaaS offerings although solutions built on PaaS offerings are often delivered as SaaS. PaaS offerings also needn’t expose IaaS and there’s more to PaaS than just running platforms on IaaS.
Slide Objectives:Explain the differences and relationship between IaaS, PaaS, and SaaS in more detail.Speaking Points:Here’s another way to look at the cloud services taxonomy and how this taxonomy maps to the components in an IT infrastructure. Packaged SoftwareWith packaged software a customer would be responsible for managing the entire stack – ranging from the network connectivity to the applications. IaaSWith Infrastructure as a Service, the lower levels of the stack are managed by a vendor. Some of these components can be provided by traditional hosters – in fact most of them have moved to having a virtualized offering. Very few actually provide an OSThe customer is still responsible for managing the OS through the Applications. For the developer, an obvious benefit with IaaS is that it frees the developer from many concerns when provisioning physical or virtual machines. This was one of the earliest and primary use cases for Amazon Web Services Elastic Cloud Compute (EC2). Developers were able to readily provision virtual machines (AMIs) on EC2, develop and test solutions and, often, run the results ‘in production’. The only requirement was a credit card to pay for the services.PaaSWith Platform as a Service, everything from the network connectivity through the runtime is provided and managed by the platform vendor. The Windows Azure best fits in this category today. In fact because we don’t provide access to the underlying virtualization or operating system today, we’re often referred to as not providing IaaS.PaaS offerings further reduce the developer burden by additionally supporting the platform runtime and related application services. With PaaS, the developer can, almost immediately, begin creating the business logic for an application. Potentially, the increases in productivity are considerable and, because the hardware and operational aspects of the cloud platform are also managed by the cloud platform provider, applications can quickly be taken from an idea to reality very quickly.SaaSFinally, with SaaS, a vendor provides the application and abstracts you from all of the underlying components.
Slide Objectives:Provide a high level summary of Windows Azure and what it enables at a high levelSpeaking Points:What is Azure?FlexibleWindows Azure is now more flexible then ever beforeWindows Azure helped pioneer the concept of Platform as a ServiceIt provides a rich set of managed services enabling you to compose applications. We’re now making those services richer. With the June update we have now have enabled infrastructure as a service. Including the ability to host and deploy durable virtual machines in the cloud running both Windows and LinuxOpenSome of you maybe surprised to hear Linux at a Microsoft conference.Our support of Linux is just one example of how we’re embracing openness in a fundamental new way. With the June release we are supporting more operating systems, more languages, and more open protocolsReleasing all of the Azure SDKs on GitHub under an open source license. SummaryWe believe the end result is truly a unique modelYou can now use both platform as a service and infrastructure as a service *together*You can now use the best of the Microsoft ecosystem and the best of the open source ecosystem *together*Enabling you to build better and more scalable solutions. Notes:Comprehensive set of services that enable you to build, host and scale applications in Microsoft datacenters Windows Azure is an open and flexible cloud platform that enables you to quickly build, deploy and manage applications across a global network of Microsoft-managed datacenters. You can build applications using any language, tool or framework. And you can integrate your public cloud applications with your existing IT environment.
Slide Objectives:Describe the three main feature components of Windows Azure that will be discussed through the rest of the presentationSpeaking Points:Virtual MachinesCloud ServicesWeb Sites
Slide Objectives:Discuss the instance sizing and costsSpeaking Points:
Slide Objective:You need an availability set for a 99.95% SLANotes:Without at least two virtual machines performing the same workload grouped into an availability set you get a 99.95% SLA.
Slide Objectives:Speaking Points:Windows Azure runs on datacenters around the worldEnabling you to deploy and run applications and infrastructure close to your customers. Notes:Windows Azure services such as compute and storage are now available in 8 worldwide datacenters with an additional 24 Content Delivery Network endpoints. You can’t have a real cloud without a data center.
Slide Objectives:Discuss Windows Azure Country Availability Speaking Points:Windows Azure is now available in over 89 countries and territories.Anyone within these countries can sign up for a free trial or a paid subscription to use Windows Azure servicesOf course you can build and deliver solutions to any of your customers worldwide
Slide Objectives:Highlight the Windows Azure Virtual Machines featureSpeaking Points:As you saw you can use both Windows Server or LinuxYou can install any software you want in the virtual machine. It’s your virtual machineYou can also setup a virtual private network to connect VMs to your on-premises infrastructure
Windows ServerWindows Server 2008 R2 and later versions are supported for the following roles: Active Directory Domain ServicesActive Directory Federation ServicesActive Directory Lightweight Directory ServicesApplication ServerDNS ServerFax ServerNetwork Policy and Access ServicesPrint and Document ServicesWeb Server (IIS)Windows Deployment ServicesWindows Server Update ServicesFile Services
(SLIDE CONTAINS BUILDS OF THE NEXT FOUR SLIDES)Slide Objectives:Highlight Windows Azure Durable Storage and how it works with Virtual MachinesSpeaking Points:The other neat thing that we’re doing with Windows Azure now is making it possible for you to mount durable drives to your virtual machine. We’re trying to do it in way that it is very reliable, consistent, and delivers a high performance.One of the things that’s different about how we enabled it is that when you mount a drive either in the portal or in the command line we are backing the disk with the Windows Azure Storage system that we’re running in the cloud todayThere are a couple nice characteristics about the storage system.Replication One is that we triple replicate the content within the data center. If a disk ever goes bad that you data is on then we have two other copies of the data that we can work with and we do not have any interruption of serviceWe can then spin up a new replica once we detect a disk is badFrom your VMs perspective you never know that an issue actually occurred[build]So you get much more reliability and an always on experience even when hardware failsNotes:Mention that Windows Azure Virtual Machines are backed by a durable store. Let’s spend a few minutes talking about how this works.
Speaking Points:Another thing that is nice about the Windows Azure Storage solution is that we have support for Continuous storage geo-replicationWhat this means is that whenever you save something in the storage system, in the background we can automatically replicate the data to another datacenter. We guarantee that these data centers are several hundred miles apart so that in the case of a natural disaster or a complete data center failure you can be ensured that a copy of your data exists somewhere else. You don’t have to set anything up to enable it. It’s automatically enabled by default.You can turn it off if there are policy reasons why you wouldn’t want it enabled. The end result is that you can deliver more robust solutions with even greater integrity
Slide Objectives:Describe Geo-replicationSpeaking Points:Another thing that is nice about the Windows Azure Storage solution is that we have support for Continuous storage geo-replicationWhat this means is that whenever you save something in the storage system, in the background we can automatically replicate the data to another datacenter. We guarantee that these data centers are several hundred miles apart so that in the case of a natural disaster or a complete data center failure you can be ensured that a copy of your data exists somewhere else. You don’t have to set anything up to enable it. It’s automatically enabled by default.You can turn it off if there are policy reasons why you wouldn’t want it enabled. The end result is that you can deliver more robust solutions with even greater integrity
Slide Objectives:Highlight the Windows Azure Virtual Machines featureSpeaking Points:As you saw you can use both Windows Server or LinuxYou can install any software you want in the virtual machine. It’s your virtual machineYou can also setup a virtual private network to connect VMs to your on-premises infrastructure
Slide Objectives:Describe the three main feature components of Windows Azure that will be discussed through the rest of the presentationSpeaking Points:Virtual MachinesCloud ServicesWeb Sites