Hybrid cloud is an IT infrastructure that combines public cloud services and private cloud resources and enables applications to be managed and ported between them. It creates a tough, flexible platform for running a company’s analytical and computing workloads, because applications can run simultaneously on multiple environments within the infrastructure. A hybrid cloud deployment leverages public clouds and private data centers and offers the flexibility to switch at any time.
IT leaders often must determine whether to use public cloud or on-premises infrastructure for their analytical workloads. When deciding between these two capabilities, they will take into account factors like corporate culture, security concerns, and data governance rules.
On-premises object storage and file systems are increasingly being chosen by leaders when they choose to keep their data and applications on-premises. With object store analytics, IT leaders can deliver a transparent data experience for users who typically don’t care where the data is actually stored.
Hybrid cloud advantages
By implementing hybrid cloud, you can increase flexibility, performance, and scalability. It paves the way for digital transformation while maintaining complete control of the data offering the following benefits:A hybrid cloud requires a blend of technologies that enable data analytics operations equally on any of the public clouds as well as on-premises. For example, object stores are fundamental for data storage in many hybrid clouds. Cloud-based object stores such as Amazon S3 buckets are functionally similar to some on-premises object storage offered by Pure Storage, Dell EMC ECS, Cloudian, Scality, MinIO, NetApp, H3C, and VAST Data. So the user experience regarding data analytics is the same, regardless of where the data resides.
Likewise, well-architected applications like databases and query engines can be developed to access data either in cloud or in on-premises. While cloud-only databases require all data be loaded to the proprietary cloud, hybrid cloud databases can:
Essentially, hybrid cloud applications can leverage cloud technologies for on-premises deployments, which offers greater flexibility to the enterprise architect.
Here are a few examples of data analytics at work within a hybrid cloud:
High availability and disaster recovery
Hybrid clouds are a perfect way to remove reliance on a single vendor and therefore a single point of failure. In mission critical applications, companies can instantiate a cloud-based solution while also maintaining an on-premises copy for disaster recovery. Since the architecture that combines compute nodes with object store is similar between on-premises copies and cloud production, both environments can be managed similarly.
Develop once and serve data anywhere
There’s value to your developers if they can write one set of services without having to worry about the specifics of any given cloud service-provider. You may uncover subtle differences between providers as your real-life analytical workloads hit the servers. Nuances between complicated JOINs, data loading, short/long queries, or machine learning are bound to surface as you evaluate providers. The “noisy neighbors” problem may also be a factor, as some cloud providers share your resources with other clients and make your SLAs unpredictable. The freedom to move a workload seamlessly to another provider, or even to on-premises, allows you to go anywhere your price and performance decisions take you.
Leveraging previous hardware investments
Your company may have already made a major capital investment in hardware, yet the benefits of cloud architectures, with simplified management tools and scalability, might tempt you to abandon those investments in favor of the cloud. In most cases, you can leverage this commodity hardware for an on-premises private cloud by reconfiguring it, thus creating a hybrid environment with all the advantages described here.
When public cloud isn’t possible
Having a single data infrastructure does not always meet the distinct regulatory and market requirements of each line of business. While cloud technologies may be attractive to your company, there are many reasons you may need to keep at least some data on-premises. For example, regulations may dictate that you keep personally identifiable information (PII) within the country of origin. Configuring an in-country on-premises cloud may be the right solution. On the other hand, sometimes data is so sensitive that only an on-premises solution will do.
If a hybrid cloud sounds like a great solution for your enterprise IT environment, there are some steps you can take to determine if a hybrid cloud is right for your organization:
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