Micro Focus is now part of OpenText. Learn more >

You are here

You are here

What's between your clouds? That's key to multi-cloud performance

public://pictures/davidl.jpg
David Linthicum Chief Cloud Strategy Officer, Deloitte Consulting
 

Multi-cloud success is more about what lies between the clouds than what's on the clouds themselves. These critical layers of software that exist between the heterogeneous mix of clouds your enterprise uses will need your full attention in the coming year.

First, though, remember the primary reasons most enterprises choose multi-cloud to begin with. The most obvious benefit is that multi-cloud can leverage best-of-breed cloud services from all of the providers. Next is the opportunity to save money, and third is the ability to avoid vendor lock-in. 

On the flip side, multi-cloud's operational complexity can outpace its benefits when compared to enterprises that leverage a single public cloud deployment. However, more and more enterprises require certain features of multi-cloud that can offset the complexity issues, if managed correctly.  

Here's what you need to know to minimize complexity to make multi-cloud work at peak performance levels.

Get your multi-cloud up to speed

First, you need management and monitoring layers. These include AIOps, security managers, governance tooling, and other technologies that can manage and control heterogeneous cloud deployments.

The management and monitoring layers are just as important—perhaps even more so—than are the native services that run on those public clouds. These layers of software systems become the jumping-off point for modern cloud operations, and they can operate without leveraging cloud-specific systems as you move forward. 

Second, public cloud providers are beginning to invest in cross-cloud solutions. Most won't mention the word multi-cloud, but they plan to support this architecture, nonetheless. This puts the nail in the coffin of less complex, single-cloud deployments that do not take advantage of best-of-breed. 

Some people remain skeptical that public cloud providers will build technology that will integrate with the competition, but the providers really have no other choice. Remember when Apple and Microsoft devices could not communicate? Cloud vendors do. This is not a new trend.

It's what's in the middle that counts

Enterprises will continue to move to multi-cloud as the preferred cloud deployment platform, and that move is to the middle. While each cloud's native services are perhaps more mature than many of the cross-cloud solutions that reside in the middle, they are native to only one cloud. 

So native services can provide an operational function or functions to the native cloud, and some have been modified to interact with other clouds, but none are purpose-built to manage other cloud brands. 

Here's a hard reality: For multi-cloud deployments to benefit from common operational services that may run from a particular cloud, the common operational services must logically exist above all cloud brands to leverage the native services of each cloud. 

Instead of two, three, or more consoles that provide operational information from each cloud provider, you want a single user interface, both visual and API-based, that can abstract the differences in the native services from the human operators. 

This concept applies to platform, data, and application management and monitoring services. It's also relevant to services such as cost management, security operations, backup and recovery, user management, and tagging. Even common services such as an AI knowledge base can instantly learn from the data housed in all of the leveraged clouds.

AIOps and other tools

Tools vary and become a reflection of your requirements. However, AIOps tooling is emerging as one of the larger players. This allows you to centrally operate a multi-cloud, and it will learn how to do its job better the more it does it. The idea is to leverage abstraction and automation as much as you can to remove as many humans from the operational processes as you can.

Other tools that are emerging as common cross-cloud services include security managers that provide identity management, key management, encryption services, and others, to span all cloud brands as well as traditional systems. 

They do this by abstracting the native security services that run in each cloud, and then they allow common processes such as authorization to be centrally managed. The downside: Many of these systems are new, all approach the problem in different ways, and thus you might have to adopt a mix of tools instead of only one.

What does the new middle mean for cloud computing?

If you leverage cross-cloud solutions to operate your multi-cloud, you'll likely experience the following:

  • Reduced complexity: While multi-cloud deployments are vastly more complex, the use of cross-cloud tools should reduce how that increased complexity affects your operations.
  • Reduced costs: You'll need fewer ops staffers to run the multi-cloud, since you'll be able to operate the multi-cloud using a single, simplified interface. 
  • Reduced security risks: When you reduce the complexity, SecOps will become more effective. Unified security layers that encompass traditional and cloud computing systems will continue to become more effective due to the lack of individual security systems for each silo in the enterprise. 

This new reality caught some enterprises by surprise: We no longer design for native cloud-based systems, but for software that runs between clouds. Enterprises will find themselves once more in charge of the software solutions that may run for a particular cloud, but the solutions will be purpose-built to provide common services across clouds, such as the examples covered above.

Best practices are just beginning to emerge for this new type of cloud architecture. That said, enterprises will likely make a few mistakes, and cross-cloud solutions will need to mature a bit before common services built to work across public clouds become commonplace. 

Steps to cloud success

Cloud architects are having a hard time reaching a consensus on the best approach and technology solutions for the middle of the clouds. Pioneers are experimenting with common cloud services as a few enterprises move to migrate more than one-third of the enterprise's workloads to a multi-cloud. 

With best practices and approaches still in their experimental stages, the current best process is as follows.

Deep planning

This is often overlooked when moving to a single public cloud provider, largely because that cloud provider will not likely let you fail. The only defense against failure for multi-cloud solutions is to splurge on planning, with some initial validation testing. 

This means creating lists of native cloud services you'll use, and approaches and technical solutions to address common security, common governance, common management, and so on. 

These are the harder problems to solve, considering the prior lack of interest among vendors to develop cross-cloud services, and the immaturity of current multi-cloud solutions. 

Some of the thinking that should come out of this process includes: ops planning, SecOps planning, integration with DevOps/DevSecOps, testing, network, common data storage and management, and any number of architecture patterns that may be applicable to your needs. 

Deep testing  

Even if a provider offers cross-cloud services using one configuration or architecture, it can't account for all configurations that need to work and play well together. Security systems don't provide the points of integration that most assumed were there or were untested. This becomes a limitation that can kill multi-cloud projects and/or momentum. 

It's the responsibility of those who deploy cross-cloud services to ensure that the solutions will work and play well together on the multi-cloud configuration you wish to use. This includes the public clouds you want to employ and the native services you want to leverage—storage, compute, database, etc.—within those public clouds. 

You should be at least 98% certain that the solution is workable coming out of this testing process.

Deep operations  

Most of what will be considered a success with multi-cloud, and multi-cloud using common cloud services, won't be what rolls out on the first day of deployment. The longer-term achievements of consistent business services leveraged from multi-cloud will be the hallmarks of its success. 

Operations will be the most measured aspect of multi-cloud success or failure. Businesses will leverage systems within the public clouds that they will grow to depend upon. The systems in the cloud could become the entire business. 

This means you can't get operations wrong at any step of deployment or at any time thereafter. Ops planning needs to lead to approaches and tools that work longer term. This means you also need to leverage a continuous improvement model, where the ops processes and tooling change continuously to improve ops efficiency, performance, and resiliency. 

Focus on the right tasks

Many who plan to deploy multi-clouds focus on the wrong things. They concentrate on what native cloud services to leverage and deploy, on which public cloud, more than they evaluate common services that span public clouds. That approach will work, but it won't scale, which means it won't work well—and eventually it won't work at all. 

If you focus on building out redundant native services on each cloud, you will create a massive amount of complexity that will lead to efficiency and security issues that could kill your multi-cloud deployment.

Building in the middle of public clouds should be your focus right now. The struggle in the short term will be to find guidance to approach your middle-based, multi-cloud deployment, and what the costs and benefits will be to get a cross-cloud architecture and solution set properly funded. 

What lies between a multi-cloud could contain the set of solutions that allow your business to become more effective in its markets and incorporate traditional systems with newer cloud-based systems. 

There is also a larger strategic advantage to building out the middle of the clouds. You’ll be able to solve problems you have yet to get around to, such as master data management, identity-based security, and cross-platform audit systems, to name just a few. 

If you are involved with IT, multi-cloud is in your future. The layers that lie between a multi-cloud are where the next innovations will evolve and development efforts will explode. This is the next big trend.

Keep learning

Read more articles about: Enterprise ITCloud