In this article, we put together answers to some of the most frequently asked questions we’ve heard about cloud migration. If you’re new to the matter or consider the idea of moving to the cloud, this FAQ will help you better understand the concepts of cloud computing, cloud migration, as well as its main benefits and challenges.
Cloud computing is the availability of different services, including data storage, servers, software, and databases, through the Internet. It allows enterprises and small businesses to minimize or even avoid upfront IT infrastructure costs, get their applications up and running faster, and help their IT teams flexibly manage resources according to demand, which is often changeable and unpredictable.
In most cases, cloud migration involves migrating mission-critical operations from on-premises or legacy infrastructure to a virtual data center of a cloud provider or from one cloud provider to another. It involves migrating data, applications, databases, and IT processes to remote data centers.
Cloud migration is a great leap toward a business digital transformation that changes how processes and policies flow.
Here are the most notable benefits of using cloud computing.
Agility and Scalability. Many CIOs see business agility as the main driver for adopting the cloud. Cloud services automatically scale capacity to meet growing or changing demand and enable teams to collaborate on app updates or troubleshoot issues from anywhere rather than locally. This level of continuity can give businesses a natural competitive edge.
Reduced hosting costs. With the cloud, you no longer need to worry about the costs of maintaining physical servers. In this case, a third-party data center manages the servers – often on a subscription-based model – which reduces capital costs, converting them to operational expenses.
Security. The cloud provides more security than data centers – sensitive data and applications are stored centrally. Most cloud providers also prevent unwanted traffic to your data by regularly updating their security systems, which helps you avoid threats and concentrate on essential business processes. Moreover, the so-called private clouds are at your disposal for utterly critical data. Unlike public clouds, these clouds provide a high isolation level and are available only to select users instead of the general public.
Disaster Recovery possibilities. This feature is vital for businesses of all sizes but was unaffordable for small businesses until recently. Today, cloud computing is on the rise, helping more and more organizations implement backup and recovery solutions and becoming less time-consuming and investment-intensive. Among the most frequently used disaster recovery-related services are cross-cloud disaster recovery, when an organization’s workloads are deployed in multiple public clouds, and cloud backup, which refers to keeping data backed up on a remote server.
Resource savings. Since the cloud capacity continuously adjusts to meet your organization’s needs, it utilizes the necessary resources, which is much more efficient than having an enormous on-premises server infrastructure that requires high maintenance costs.
The cloud is a safe place to store mission-critical data, and now, given the rising popularity of the cloud, it surpassed the capabilities of most on-premises systems in terms of security. The recent pandemic gave a further boost to the even-rising cloud market, so many IT security companies decided to focus their RnD efforts on cloud computing security.
There are numerous cloud migration challenges that warrant careful planning, testing, and resource allocation. We’ll consider the most important of them.
It should be noted that proper cloud migration software can successfully tackle those challenges. With it, companies can avoid downtime, minimize data loss risks, efficiently manage resources, and eliminate compatibility issues.
First, cloud orchestration helps ensure data integrity and avoid deployment errors during cloud migration. Then, it offers many important benefits for cloud management: improved optimization, visibility and control, long-term cost savings, increased business agility, and many more.
Now, orchestration is merely a “nice to have” for most companies; however, with cloud deployment and management becoming an increasingly complicated task, it will very soon become a “must have”.
When migrating to the cloud, you should take into consideration such parameters as security, data protection, resilience and availability. For instance, if you feel that you just want to replicate your data in the cloud, you may be good to go with lift-and-shift. Just remember, to ensure the highest return on cloud investment in the long term, you need to choose a cloud migration approach responsibly.
You need to update migration plans every time you change your original infrastructure — this way, you’ll have the same environment on a target side.
Groups are necessary for logical combinations of machines. Association principles can be different: general purpose of machines, geographical location, general rules for storing snapshots and replication schedule. A particularly important and convenient groups feature is the ability to manage common parameters of replication schedule and snapshot storage rules at a time, that significantly simplifies flexible configuration of business application replication.
Setting a replication schedule that deals with a part of IT infrastructure is a complicated task that can be executed with the help of a cloud migration tool, such as Hystax Acura. Settings for schedules and snapshot storage policies can be carried out for all machines as well as for individual groups and individual machines. Detailed overview of this functionality can be found on the cloud migration tool documentation page.
Today, the importance of cloud computing for almost any organization is too high to ignore it. On the other hand, it takes much knowledge of the field to get the most out of cloud migration and to avoid pitfalls. In this article, we addressed the most frequent and critical questions related to the cloud so that you know what to start with – and what should be avoided.
Nick Smirnov, CEO at Hystax
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