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Chapter 2 Cloud Computing

The document discusses topics related to cloud computing including cloud characteristics, service models, enabling technologies like virtualization, and challenges. Cloud computing provides scalable resources and services over the internet and addresses issues like rapid changes in requirements through on-demand access and elasticity.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
37 views37 pages

Chapter 2 Cloud Computing

The document discusses topics related to cloud computing including cloud characteristics, service models, enabling technologies like virtualization, and challenges. Cloud computing provides scalable resources and services over the internet and addresses issues like rapid changes in requirements through on-demand access and elasticity.

Uploaded by

akimathi019
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Selected Topics in

CS
Chapter 2 Cloud Computing

1
Publish

Inform scale

Interact
web

Integrate

Transact

Discover (intelligence)
Semantic
discovery

Automate (discovery)
HPC, cloud
Data-intensive

Social media and networking


2

Data marketplace and analytics


Evolution of Internet Computing

time
deep web
Challenges

 Alignment with the needs of the business / user / non-


computer specialists / community and society
 Need to address the scalability issue: large scale data,
high performance computing, automation, response
time, rapid prototyping, and rapid time to production
 Need to effectively address (i) ever shortening cycle of
obsolescence, (ii) heterogeneity and (iii) rapid changes
in requirements
 Transform data from diverse sources into intelligence
and deliver intelligence to right people/user/systems
 What about providing all this in a cost-effective
manner?

3
Enter the cloud
 Cloud computing is Internet-based computing, whereby
shared resources, software and information are
provided to computers and other devices on-demand,
like the electricity grid.
 The cloud computing is a culmination of numerous
attempts at large scale computing with seamless access
to virtually limitless resources.
 on-demand computing, utility computing, ubiquitous
computing, autonomic computing, platform
computing, edge computing, elastic computing, grid
computing, …
4
What is Cloud Computing?
 Inaddition, the platform provides on
demand services, that are always on,
anywhere, anytime and any place.
 Pay for use and as needed, elastic
 scale up and down in capacity and
functionalities
 The hardware and software services
are available to
 general public, enterprises,
corporations and businesses markets
5
Cloud Computing Characteristics
Common Characteristics:

Massive Scale Resilient Computing

Homogeneity Geographic Distribution

Virtualization Service Orientation

Low Cost Software Advanced Security

Essential Characteristics:

On Demand Self-Service
Broad Network Access Rapid Elasticity
Resource Pooling Measured Service

6
Adopted from: Effectively and Securely Using the Cloud Computing Paradigm by peter Mell, Tim Grance
Cloud Xteristics
 Cloud computing is an umbrella term used to refer
to Internet based development and services
 A number of characteristics define cloud data,
applications services and infrastructure:
 Remotely hosted: Services or data are hosted on remote
infrastructure.
 Ubiquitous: Services or data are available from anywhere.
 Commodified: The result is a utility computing model
similar to traditional that of traditional utilities, like gas
and electricity - you pay for what you would want!

7
Basic Cloud Characteristics
 The “no-need-to-know” in terms of the
underlying details of infrastructure, applications
interface with the infrastructure via the APIs.
 The “flexibility and elasticity” allows these
systems to scale up and down at will
 utilising the resources of all kinds
 CPU, storage, server capacity, load balancing, and
databases
 The “pay as much as used and needed” type of
utility computing and the “always on!,
anywhere and any place” type of network-
based computing.
8
Cloud Service Models

Software as a Platform as a Infrastructure as a


Service (SaaS) Service (PaaS) Service (IaaS)

SalesForce CRM

LotusLive

Google
App
Engine

9
Adopted from: Effectively and Securely Using the Cloud Computing Paradigm by peter Mell, Tim Grance
SaaS Maturity Model
Level 1: Ad-Hoc/Custom –
One Instance per
customer

Level 2: Configurable per


customer

Level 3: configurable &


Multi-Tenant-Efficient

Level 4: Scalable,
Configurable & Multi-
Tenant-Efficient

10

Source: Frederick Chong and Gianpaolo Carraro, “Architectures Strategies for Catching the Long Tail”
Software as a Service (SaaS)
 SaaS is a model of software deployment
where an application is hosted as a service
provided to customers across the Internet.
 Saas alleviates the burden of software
maintenance/support
 but users relinquish control over software
versions and requirements.
 Terms that are used in this sphere include
 Platform as a Service (PaaS) and
 Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS)
11
Cloud Computing Service Layers
Services Description
Services – Complete business services such as
Services PayPal, OpenID, OAuth, Google Maps, Alexa

Application Application – Cloud based software that eliminates


Application the need for local installation such as Google Apps,
Focused Microsoft Online

Development – Software development platforms used


Development to build custom cloud based applications (PAAS &
SAAS) such as SalesForce

Platform – Cloud based platforms, typically provided


Platform using virtualization, such as Amazon ECC, Sun Grid

Storage – Data storage or cloud based NAS such


Infrastructure Storage as CTERA, iDisk, CloudNAS

Focused
Hosting – Physical data centers such as those run
Hosting by IBM, HP, NaviSite, etc.

12

12
Enabling Technologies

Cloud
Cloudapplications:
applications:data-intensive,
data-intensive,
compute-intensive,
compute-intensive,storage-intensive
storage-intensive

Bandwidth
WS
Services interface

Web-services, SOA, WS standards

VM0 VM1 VMn

Storage Virtualization: bare metal, hypervisor. …


Models: S3,
BigTable,
BlobStore, ..
. Multi-core architectures

64-bit
13
processor
Virtualization
 Virtual workspaces:
 An abstraction of an execution environment that can be made
dynamically available to authorized clients by using well-defined
protocols,
 Resource quota (e.g. CPU, memory share),
 Software configuration (e.g. O/S, provided services).
 Implement on Virtual Machines (VMs):
 Abstraction of a physical host machine,
 Hypervisor intercepts and emulates instructions from VMs, and
allows management of VMs, App App App
 VMWare, Xen, etc. OS OS OS

 Hypervisor
Provide infrastructure API:
Hardware
 Plug-ins to hardware/support structures
Virtualized Stack
Virtual Machines
 VM technology allows multiple virtual machines to run on a single
physical machine.

App App App App App


Xen
Guest OS Guest OS Guest OS
(Linux) (NetBSD) (Windows)
VMWare
VM VM VM

Virtual Machine Monitor (VMM) / Hypervisor


UML

Hardware
Denali
etc.
Performance: Para-virtualization (e.g. Xen) is very close to raw physical
performance! 15
Cloud-Sourcing
 Why is it becoming a Big Deal:
 Using high-scale/low-cost providers,
 Any time/place access via web browser,
 Rapid scalability; incremental cost and load sharing,
 Can forget need to focus on local IT.
 Concerns:
 Performance, reliability, and SLAs,
 Control of data, and service parameters,
 Application features and choices,
 Interaction between Cloud providers,
 No standard API – mix of SOAP and REST!
 Privacy, security, compliance, trust…
17
Cloud Taxonomy

18
Cloud Storage
 Several large Web companies are now
exploiting the fact that they have data storage
capacity that can be hired out to others.
 allows data stored remotely to be temporarily
cached on desktop computers, mobile phones or
other Internet-linked devices.

 Amazon’s Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) and


Simple Storage Solution (S3) are well known
examples
 Mechanical Turk
19
Utility Computing – EC2
 Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2):
 Elastic, marshal 1 to 100+ PCs via WS,
 Machine Specs…,
 Fairly cheap!
 Powered by Xen – a Virtual Machine:
 Different from Vmware and VPC as uses “para-virtualization”
where the guest OS is modified to use special hyper-calls:
 Hardware contributions by Intel (VT-x/Vanderpool) and AMD
(AMD-V).
 Supports “Live Migration” of a virtual machine between hosts.
 Linux, Windows, OpenSolaris
 Management Console/AP
20
Types of Clouds

Private
Public
Community
Hybrid

21
Opportunities and Challenges
 The use of the cloud provides a number of
opportunities:
 It enables services to be used without any
understanding of their infrastructure.
 Cloud computing works using economies of scale:
 Itpotentially lowers the outlay expense for start up
companies, as they would no longer need to buy their own
software or servers.
 Cost would be by on-demand pricing.
 Vendors and Service providers claim costs by establishing an
ongoing revenue stream.
 Data and services are stored remotely but accessible
from “anywhere”.
22
Opportunities and Challenges
 In parallel there has been backlash against cloud computing:
 Use of cloud computing means dependence on others and that could possibly
limit flexibility and innovation:
 The others are likely become the bigger Internet companies like Google and IBM,
who may monopolise the market.
 Some argue that this use of supercomputers is a return to the time of mainframe
computing that the PC was a reaction against.
 Security could prove to be a big issue:
 It is still unclear how safe out-sourced data is and when using these services
ownership of data is not always clear.
 There are also issues relating to policy and access:
 If your data is stored abroad whose policy do you adhere to?
 What happens if the remote server goes down?
 How will you then access files?
 There have been cases of users being locked out of accounts and losing access to
data.
23
What is the purpose and benefits?
 Cloud computing enables companies and
applications, which are system infrastructure
dependent, to be infrastructure-less.
 By using the Cloud infrastructure on “pay as used
and on demand”, all of us can save in capital and
operational investment!
 Clients can:
 Put their data on the platform instead of on their own
desktop PCs and/or on their own servers.
 They can put their applications on the cloud and use the
servers within the cloud to do processing and data
manipulations etc.
24
Advantages of Cloud Computing
 Lower computer costs:
 You do not need a high-powered and high-priced computer
to run cloud computing's web-based applications.
 Since applications run in the cloud, not on the desktop PC,
your desktop PC does not need the processing power or hard
disk space demanded by traditional desktop software.
 When you are using web-based applications, your PC can be
less expensive, with a smaller hard disk, less memory, more
efficient processor...
 In fact, your PC in this scenario does not even need a CD or
DVD drive, as no software programs have to be loaded and
no document files need to be saved.
25
Advantages of Cloud Computing
 Improved performance:
 With few large programs hogging your computer's
memory, you will see better performance from your PC.
 Computers in a cloud computing system boot and run
faster because they have fewer programs and processes
loaded into memory…
 Reduced software costs:
 Instead of purchasing expensive software applications,
you can get most of what you need for free-ish!
 most cloud computing applications today, such as the Google Docs suite.
 better than paying for similar commercial software
 which alone may be justification for switching to cloud applications.
26
Advantages of Cloud Computing
 Instant software updates:
 Another advantage to cloud computing is that you are no longer
faced with choosing between obsolete software and high upgrade
costs.
 When the application is web-based, updates happen automatically
 available the next time you log into the cloud.
 When you access a web-based application, you get the latest version
 without needing to pay for or download an upgrade.

 Improved document format compatibility.


 You do not have to worry about the documents you create on your
machine being compatible with other users' applications or OSes
 There are potentially no format incompatibilities when everyone is
sharing documents and applications in the cloud.
27
Advantages of Cloud Computing
 Unlimited storage capacity:
 Cloud computing offers virtually limitless storage.
 Your computer's current 1 Tbyte hard drive is small compared
to the hundreds of Pbytes available in the cloud.
 Increased data reliability:
 Unlike desktop computing, in which if a hard disk crashes and
destroy all your valuable data, a computer crashing in the
cloud should not affect the storage of your data.
 ifyour personal computer crashes, all your data is still out there in
the cloud, still accessible
 In a world where few individual desktop PC users back up
their data on a regular basis, cloud computing is a data-safe
computing platform!
28
Advantages of Cloud Computing
 Universal document access:
 That is not a problem with cloud computing, because you
do not take your documents with you.
 Instead, they stay in the cloud, and you can access them
whenever you have a computer and an Internet connection
 Documents are instantly available from wherever you are
 Latest version availability:
 When you edit a document at home, that edited version is
what you see when you access the document at work.
 The cloud always hosts the latest version of your documents
 as long as you are connected, you are not in danger of having an outdated
version
29
Advantages of Cloud Computing
 Easier group collaboration:
 Sharing documents leads directly to better collaboration.
 Many users do this as it is an important advantages of cloud
computing
 multiple users can collaborate easily on documents and projects
 Device independence.
 You are no longer tethered to a single computer or
network.
 Changes to computers, applications and documents follow
you through the cloud.
 Move to a portable device, and your applications and
documents are still available. 30
Disadvantages of Cloud Computing
 Requires a constant Internet connection:
 Cloudcomputing is impossible if you cannot
connect to the Internet.
 Since you use the Internet to connect to both
your applications and documents, if you do not
have an Internet connection you cannot access
anything, even your own documents.
A dead Internet connection means no work and in
areas where Internet connections are few or
inherently unreliable, this could be a deal-
breaker.
31
Disadvantages of Cloud Computing
 Does not work well with low-speed connections:
 Similarly, a low-speed Internet connection, such as
that found with dial-up services, makes cloud
computing painful at best and often impossible.
 Web-based applications require a lot of bandwidth to
download, as do large documents.
 Features might be limited:
 This situation is bound to change, but today many
web-based applications simply are not as full-featured
as their desktop-based applications.
 For example, you can do a lot more with Microsoft PowerPoint
than with Google Presentation's web-based offering
32
Disadvantages of Cloud Computing
 Can be slow:
 Even with a fast connection, web-based applications
can sometimes be slower than accessing a similar
software program on your desktop PC.
 Everything about the program, from the interface to
the current document, has to be sent back and forth
from your computer to the computers in the cloud.
 If the cloud servers happen to be backed up at that
moment, or if the Internet is having a slow day, you
would not get the instantaneous access you might
expect from desktop applications.

33
Disadvantages of Cloud Computing
 Stored data might not be secure:
 With cloud computing, all your data is stored on the cloud.
 The questions is How secure is the cloud?
 Can unauthorised users gain access to your confidential
data?
 Stored data can be lost:
 Theoretically, data stored in the cloud is safe, replicated
across multiple machines.
 But on the off chance that your data goes missing, you
have no physical or local backup.
 Put simply, relying on the cloud puts you at risk if the cloud lets
you down. 34
Disadvantages of Cloud Computing
 HPC Systems:
 Not clear that you can run compute-intensive HPC applications
that use MPI/OpenMP!
 Scheduling is important with this type of application
 as you want all the VM to be co-located to minimize communication
latency!
 General Concerns:
 Each cloud systems uses different protocols and different APIs
 may not be possible to run applications between cloud based systems
 Amazon has created its own DB system (not SQL 92), and
workflow system (many popular workflow systems out there)
 so your normal applications will have to be adapted to execute on these
platforms.
35
Grid Technology:
 Emerging enabling technology.
 Natural evolution of distributed systems and the Internet.
 Middleware supporting network of systems to facilitate
sharing, standardization and openness.
 Infrastructure and application model dealing with sharing of
compute cycles, data, storage and other resources.
 Publicized by prominent industries as on-demand computing,
utility computing, etc.
 Move towards delivering “computing” to masses similar to
other utilities (electricity and voice communication).”
 Now,

36
It is a changed world now…
 Explosive growth in applications: biomedical informatics, space
exploration, business analytics, web 2.0 social networking: YouTube,
Facebook
 Extreme scale content generation: e-science and e-business data deluge
 Extraordinary rate of digital content consumption: digital gluttony: Apple
iPhone, iPad, Amazon Kindle
 Exponential growth in compute capabilities: multi-core, storage,
bandwidth, virtual machines (virtualization)
 Very short cycle of obsolescence in technologies: Windows Vista
Windows 7; Java versions; CC#; Phython
 Newer architectures: web services, persistence models, distributed file
systems/repositories (Google, Hadoop), multi-core, wireless and mobile
 Diverse knowledge and skill levels of the workforce
 You simply cannot manage this complex situation with your traditional IT
infrastructure:
37
The Future
 Many of the activities loosely grouped together under
cloud computing have already been happening and
centralised computing activity is not a new phenomena
 Grid Computing was the last research-led centralised
approach
 However there are concerns that the mainstream
adoption of cloud computing could cause many
problems for users
 Many new open source systems appearing that you can
install and run on your local cluster
 should be able to run a variety of applications on these
systems
38

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