Implementing and developing cloud computing applications
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2011
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LEADER | 00000nam a2200000zc 4500 | ||
---|---|---|---|
001 | BV037465119 | ||
003 | DE-604 | ||
005 | 20111111 | ||
007 | t| | ||
008 | 110608s2011 xxua||| |||| 00||| eng d | ||
010 | |a 2010037120 | ||
020 | |a 9781439830826 |c hardback |9 978-1-4398-3082-6 | ||
035 | |a (OCoLC)838420612 | ||
035 | |a (DE-599)BVBBV037465119 | ||
040 | |a DE-604 |b ger |e aacr | ||
041 | 0 | |a eng | |
044 | |a xxu |c US | ||
049 | |a DE-20 | ||
050 | 0 | |a QA76.585 | |
082 | 0 | |a 006.7/8 | |
084 | |a ST 200 |0 (DE-625)143611: |2 rvk | ||
100 | 1 | |a Sarna, David E. Y. |e Verfasser |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a Implementing and developing cloud computing applications |c David E. Y. Sarna |
264 | 1 | |a Boca Raton [u.a.] |b CRC Press |c 2011 | |
300 | |a XXXI, 308 S. |b Ill. | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
500 | |a Includes bibliographical references and index | ||
650 | 4 | |a Datenverarbeitung | |
650 | 4 | |a Wirtschaft | |
650 | 4 | |a Cloud computing | |
650 | 4 | |a Business |x Data processing | |
650 | 7 | |a BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Production & Operations Management |2 bisacsh | |
650 | 7 | |a COMPUTERS / Information Technology |2 bisacsh | |
650 | 7 | |a COMPUTERS / Software Development & Engineering / General |2 bisacsh | |
650 | 0 | 7 | |a Cloud Computing |0 (DE-588)7623494-0 |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf |
689 | 0 | 0 | |a Cloud Computing |0 (DE-588)7623494-0 |D s |
689 | 0 | |5 DE-604 | |
856 | 4 | 2 | |m Digitalisierung UB Bayreuth |q application/pdf |u http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=022617000&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |3 Inhaltsverzeichnis |
943 | 1 | |a oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-022617000 |
Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1819600597450489856 |
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adam_text | Contents
About the Author
xix
Preface
xxi
Author s Acknowledgements
xxiii
Executive Summary
xxv
Cloud Computing
¡s a
True Paradigm Shift
xxv
From Do It Yourself to Public Cloud
—
A Continuum
xxv
Cloud Computing: Is It Old Mainframe Bess in a
New Dress?
xxv
Moving Into and Around the Clouds and Efforts
at Standardization
xxvi
Cloud Economics and Capacity Management
xxvii
Demystifying the Cloud: A Case Study Using
Amazon s Cloud Services (AWS)
xxvii
Virtualization: Open Source and VMware
xxvii
Securing the Cloud: Reliability, Availability,
and Security
xxviii
Scale and Reuse: Standing on the Shoulders of Giants
xxviii
Windows Azure
xxix
Google in the Cloud
xxix
Enterprise Cloud Vendors
xxx
Cloud Service Providers
xxxi
Practice Fusion Case Study
xxxi
Support and Reference Materials
xxxi
Chapter
1
Cloud Computing is a True Paradigm Shift
1
Chapter Overview
1
1.1
Introduction
1
1.2
What is Cloud Computing?
2
1.3
We re Using Cloud Computing Already
4
viii Contents
1.3.1
Electronic
Faxing
4
1.3.2
Voice in the Cloud
4
1.3.3
Commerce in the Cloud
5
1.3.4
Distributed Hosting in the Cloud
5
1.3.5
Accounting and Online Banking in
the Cloud
5
1.4
New in the Cloud
6
1.5
Other Cloud Applications
8
1.6
What about the Enterprise?
8
1.7
More to Come
9
Summary
9
Chapter
2
From Do It Yourself to Public Cloud
—
A Continuum
11
Chapter Objectives
11
2.1
A Brief History
11
2.2
Virtualization
11
2.3
Remote Hosting
13
2.4
Hosting Services
14
2.5
Cloud Computing Defined
15
2.5.1
Essential Characteristics
15
2.5.2
Cloud Service Models
16
2.5.3
Deployment Models
17
2.5.4
Cloud Software
17
2.5.5
Advantages of Cloud Computing
17
2.6
The Divisive Issue of Multitenancy
18
2.7
Advantages of Cloud Hosting Over Remote Hosting
19
2.8
The Battle Over Public and Private Clouds
20
2.9
Then Came the Internet
22
2.10
The Argument for Private Clouds
25
2.11
Hybrid Solutions
25
2.11.1
Hybrid Cloud—Not Really
25
2.11.2
The Hybrid Cloud Model
26
2.12
Cloud Computing for Development
26
2.13
Eucalyptus
—
Open Source Software Supporting
Hybrid Solutions
27
Eucalyptus Features and Benefits
28
2.14
Microsoft Also Endorses the Hybrid Model
30
Summary
30
Contents
¡χ
Chapter
3
Cloud Computing: Is It Old Mainframe Bess in
a New Dress?
33
Chapter Overview
33
3.1
Déjà Vu?
33
3.2
Not Remote Hosting
34
3.3
Cloud Computing is Maturing Quickly
34
Cloud Computing is Not a New Concept
35
3.4
Vision of Computer Utility
36
3.5
Desktop Virtualization
40
3.6
PaaS: Platform as a Service
41
3.7
SaaS Applications
42
3.8
Force.com and Standing on Tall Shoulders
43
3.9
Other Popular SaaS Applications
45
3.10
The Holy Grail of Computing
46
3.11
SaaS
2.0
46
Summary
47
Chapter
4
Moving Into and Around the Clouds and Efforts
at Standardization
49
4.1
Portable Software
49
4.2
Openness, Linux, and Apache
50
4.3
Closed Architectures
51
4.4
Legacy Applications and Migration to the Cloud
51
4.5
Preventing Vendor Lock-In as You Migrate to
the Cloud
52
4.5.1
What to do?
52
4.5.2
More Questions
53
4.5.3
Comparing Costs
55
4.6
Narrowing the Choices
55
4.7
Scripting Languages
55
Microsoft Visual Studio and Other
Development Environments
56
4.8
Cloud Software
57
Eucalyptus Enterprise Edition
57
4.9
Cloud-Optimized Linux
58
4.9.1
CloudLinux
58
4.9.2
Peppermint
60
4.9.3
Ubuntu s Cloud Strategy
61
4.10
CohesiveFT
63
4.10.1
Elastic Server
63
χ
Contents
4.10.2
VPN-Cubed
IPSec
to Cloud for
Hybrid and Cloud-to-Cloud Applications
65
4.11
Zend
66
4.12Abiquo
68
4.12.1
Abiquo s Vision
68
4.12.2
Management Benefits
70
4.12.3
Other Abiquo Benefits
71
4.13 3Tera
72
4.14
Elastra
73
Elastra
for Amazon Web Services
75
4.15
RightScale
75
ServerTemplates versus Machine Images
77
4.16
Today is Like
1973 78
4.17
Interclouding, Standards, andVMware s Focus
on Open PaaS
79
4.18
DMTF
81
OCSI Standardization Efforts
82
4.19
The Problem of Metering
83
4.20
Remember the Dodo Bird
83
4.21
Cloud Broker
86
Interclouding, DTMF and OVFS
88
4.22
Product Offerings
89
Summary
89
Chapter
5
Cloud Economics and Capacity Management
91
Overview
91
Choices Abound
91
5.1
Capacity Planning: A Play in Three Acts
92
Capacity Mangement: An Old-NewTechnique
93
5.2
Queueing Theory
94
5.3
Queuing and Response Time
94
5.4
Historical Note on Computer
Capacity Management
97
5.5
Evidence-Based Decision Making
98
5.6
Instrumentation (Measuring Resource
Consumption)
98
5.6.1
First, Get Your Business Needs Down
Clearly
99
5.6.2
What Technologists Must Know to
Manage Performance and Capacity
100
Contents
xi
5.7
Managers
Are from Mars, Technologists Are
from
Venus
102
5.8
Bottlenecks
102
5.9
Getting the Facts
103
5.10
Strategies
for Capacity Planning
104
5.11
Critical Success Factors (CSF) and Best Practices
104
5.12
Key Volume Indicators
107
5.12.1
Types of Workloads
109
5.12.2
Determining KVIs for an Application
109
5.12.3
Monitoring and Improving
Forecastability
109
5.12.4
Standard Costs
109
5.12.5
Determining Whether Resources are
Adequate for Projected Demand
110
5.12.6
New Applications
110
5.12.7
Accuracy of Forecasts
110
5.12.8
Queueing Models
111
5.12.9
Make or Buy a Cloud
112
Sumi
narv
113
Chapter
6
Demystifying the Cloud: A Case Study Using Amazon s
Cloud Services (AWS)
115
6.1
Why Amazon?
116
6.1.1
Amazon is Just an Illustrative Example
117
6.1.2
Let s Do It Now
118
6.1.3
Amazon
S3
Functionality
118
6.2
Using Amazon
S3 121
6.3
Cladinet Puts a Desktop Face on
S3 122
6.3.1
Use Cases for Using Virtual Drives
123
6.3.2
Beyond One-on-One: Use a Cloud
Gateway
125
6.3.3
Benefits of Using Cloud Gateway
125
6.4
Moving A Simple Application to the Cloud
126
6.5
Step One: Move Static Content to
S3 126
6.5.1
Using CloudFront
127
6.5.2
Other Tools for Moving Content to
S3 127
6.5.3
Using Amazon
S3
with Firefox S3Fox
128
6.6
Step Two: Move Web Servers and Backend
Servers to EC2
130
The Web Servers
130
6.7
Moving The Database
136
xii Contents
6.8
Using
EBS
for MySQL
137
6.9
Accessing Public Data
139
6.10
Crawl, Walk, Run
139
6.11
Scaling and Monitoring: Taking Advantage of
Cloud Services
140
Monitoring
140
6.12
Eucalyptus Enterprise Edition
142
Key Features and Functionality
143
6.13
Nimbula—Roll Your Own Private EC2
143
Summary
145
Chapter
7
Virtualization: Open Source and VMware
147
Overview
147
Virtualization Is an Old Story
148
7.1
The Hypervisor is the Secret Sauce
148
7.2
KVM
149
7.3
Xen
149
7.4
QEMU
150
7.5
Comparing
KVM
and Xen
150
7.6
Comparing
KVM
and QEMU
151
7.7
Parallels
151
7.8
A Unique Hypervisor: Microsoft Azure and
Hyper-V
151
7.8.1
Managing a Virtualized Infrastructure
152
7.8.2
Monitoring and Management
153
7.8.3
Commercial Virtualization Offerings
154
7.8.4
Citrix
154
7.8.5
VMware
155
7.9
EMC sVPLEX and VMware
160
7.10
VMware Partners with Salesforce.com and Google
162
7.11
VMforce
163
7.12
VMware and Google
164
7.12.1
Spring for AppEngine
165
7.12.2
Spring Insight and Google Speed Tracer
166
7.13
Eucalyptus and VMware
166
Recent VM Acquisitions
167
7.14
OpenStack
168
Summary
169
Contents xiii
Chapter
8
Securing the Cloud: Reliability, Availability,
and Security
171
Overview
171
8.1
The
FUDD
Factor
171
8.2
Leakage
172
8.3
Not All Threats Are External
172
8.4
Virtualization Is Inherently More Secure
1 72
8.5
Virtualization is Not Enough
1 73
8.6
The Best Security May Be Unavailable for
(In-House) Private Clouds
1 73
8.7
Providers Make Security Their Business
1 73
8.8
Cloud Security Providers Employ a Hierarchy
of Containment Strategies
1 74
8.9
How a Denial of Service Attack Is Carried Out
1 76
8.10
Cloud Computing Offers Enhanced Defenses
for Thwarting DoS Attacks
1 77
8.11
Who s Responsible? Amazon s AWS EC2 and
Salesforce.com Compared
178
8.12
VMForce.com
178
8.13
Azure and Security
179
8.14
OASIS and SPLM
179
8.15
Trust, but Verify
179
8.16
Independent Third-Party Validation
isa
Prerequisite
180
8.17
Standards and Vendor Selection
180
8.17.1
ISO
27001 180
8.17.2
SAS
70
(Statement on Auditing
Standards No.
70):
Service
Organizations
182
8.17.3
Type I and Type II Audits
183
8.18
SAS
70
and Cloud Computing
184
8.19
Cloud Security Alliance
186
8.20
SysTrust Certification
186
8.21
Cloud Security Alliance Working Toward
Cloud-Specific Certifications
187
CSA Goes Beyond
SAS
70
andlSO
27001 189
8.22
Customers Demand Better Proof
190
8.23
CloudAudit
191
Summary
192
Chapter
9
Scale and Reuse: Standing on the Shoulders of Giants
193
9.1
Objectives
193
xiv Contents
9.2
Cloud
Computing
on One Foot
193
9.3
Just Make the Call; Let Google Do It
194
9.4
Hardware Reuse
195
9.5
Scale and Reuse (Use it or Lose it)
196
9.6
Service-Oriented Architecture
197
9.7
Web
2.0 199
Summary
199
Chapter
10
Windows Azure
201
Chapter Objectives
201
10.1
Back to the Future
201
10.2
But Windows had not kept pace.
202
10.3
Billionaire s
Agita
203
10.4
Prologue to Windows Azure
203
10.5
Introducing Windows Azure
204
10.6
What is Windows Azure?
205
10.7
Microsoft s Secret
Datacenter
206
10.8
Azure is an Open Platform
207
10.9
How does the Windows Azure SDK for
PHP fit in?
208
10.10
Deployment Scenarios
208
10.11
Recent Enhancements
209
10.12
Open Source Embraced
210
10.13
Azure: laaS or PaaS?
211
10.14
Competition with Salesforce.com
212
10.15
Salesforce.com is Microsoft s Real Concern
212
10.16
Preparing for Midori
213
10.17
F# and Midori
214
10.18
An Azure Tie-ln-to Midori?
215
10.19
Azure Pricing
216
10.20
Microsoft
Intune: A
New SaaS-based Service
216
10.21
Advanced Management Tools
218
10.22
Intune is Microsoft-Centric
219
10.23
Microsoft Resources
219
Summary
220
Chapter
11
Google in the Cloud
221
Overview
221
11.1
Free is Good
222
11.2
Reaching Out to the Development Community
222
11.3
App Engine Cost Structure
223
Contents xv
11.4 Google Web
Toolkit™
223
11.5 Google
Cloud
Applications
Built on GWT
224
11.6
Google Gears
R.
I.P.
224
11.7
Google Apps Script
225
11.8
What Is Google App Engine?
226
11.9
Google App Engine for Business
228
11.10
Collaboration with VMware
229
Summary
230
Chapter^ Enterprise Cloud Vendors
233
Overview
233
12.1
IBM
233
12.1.1
Consistent Development Experience
234
12.1.2
Eleven Cloud Computing Competency
Centers Worldwide
235
12.1.3
IBM Cloud Resources
239
12.1.4
Recent IBM Cloud Press Releases
239
12.2
Amazon AWS
239
12.2.1
Amazon RDS
239
12.2.2
Amazon CloudWatch
240
12.3
Hewlett Packard
241
12.3.1
HP s SaaS Offerings
242
12.3.2
HP Business Service Management
242
12.3.3
HP sViewofthe Hybrid World
243
12.3.4
HPBSM9.0
243
12.3.5
HP Business Availability Center
244
12.3.6
HP s Test Data Management
245
12.3.7
HP Partners with Enomaly
246
12.3.8
HP s Alliance With Microsoft
247
12.3.9
HP Resources
247
12.4
Oracle (Sun)
248
12.4.1
Oracle and Sun
251
12.4.2
Oracle Resources
253
12.5
CATechnologies
253
12.5.1
Partnership with NetApp
256
12.5.2
CA Resources
257
12.6
Unisys
257
12.6.1
Unisys Stealth Security
257
12.6.2
Unisys Secure Cloud Solution
258
12.6.3
Unisys Secure Private Cloud Solution
259
12.6.4
Unisys ClearPath Cloud Solutions
259
xvi Contents
12.6.5 Unisys
Cloud
Transformation Services 260
12.6.6 Unisys Resources 260
12.6.7 Unisys
Partnerships
260
12.7
Cloud
Research 261
Summary
261
Chapter
13
Cloud Service Providers
263
Chapter
14
Overview
263
13.1
Comprehensive Cloud Service Providers
263
Joyent
263
13.2
laaS Providers
264
13.2.1
Rackspace
264
13.2.2
GoCrid
264
13.2.3
ElasticHosts
264
13.2.4
SymetriQ
265
13.3
PaaS Providers
266
13.3.1
AT&T
266
13.3.2
Terremark
266
13.3.3
EngineYard
267
13.4
SaaS Providers
268
13.4.1
NetSuite
268
13.4.2
Intuit
268
13.4.3
Intacct
268
13.4.4
FinancialForce.com
269
13.4.5
Coupa
Software
270
13.4.6
AT&T
271
13.5
Specialized Cloud Software Providers
271
13.5.1
Appistry
271
13.5.2
BMS Software
271
13.5.3
Nasuni
273
Summary
274
Practice Fusion Case Study
275
14.1
Overview
275
14.2
Practice Fusion
275
14.3
Non-Trivial, Maybe Life-Saving
276
14.4
Typical User
278
14.5
Practice Fusion Resources
280
14.6
Summary
280
Contents xvii
Chapter
15 Support
and Reference Materials
281
Overview
281
The NIST Definition of Cloud Computing
281
15.1
Characteristics of Cloud Computing
284
15.2
Commonly Cited Benefits of Cloud Computing
284
15.3
Most Cited Risks of Cloud Computing
285
15.4
Coping Strategies for Perceived Risks Associated
with Cloud Computing
286
15.5
Threats to Security in the Cloud
287
15.6
Reasons for Capacity Planning
288
15.7
Step-by-Step Work Plan for Capacity Planning
with Amazon EC2
288
15.8
Cloud Capacity Planning and Classical
Approach Compared
293
15.9
SLA Failures and Potential Solutions
293
15.10
Coping Strategies for Security Threats
294
15.11
General Questions to Ask When Migrating to
the Cloud
295
Questions for Avoiding Lock-In
295
15.12
Vendor Questions About Security for
Cloud Providers (CP)
296
15.12.1
Data Security (At Rest)
296
15.12.2
Data Security (In Transit)
296
15.12.3
Authentication
297
15.12.4
Separation Between the Customers
297
15.12.5
Cloud Legal and Regulatory Issues
297
15.12.6
Incident Response
297
15.12.7
Data Export Restrictions
298
15.12.8
Questions to Ask Potential Cloud
Providers About Costs
298
Index
301
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Sarna, David E. Y. |
author_facet | Sarna, David E. Y. |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Sarna, David E. Y. |
author_variant | d e y s dey deys |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV037465119 |
callnumber-first | Q - Science |
callnumber-label | QA76 |
callnumber-raw | QA76.585 |
callnumber-search | QA76.585 |
callnumber-sort | QA 276.585 |
callnumber-subject | QA - Mathematics |
classification_rvk | ST 200 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)838420612 (DE-599)BVBBV037465119 |
dewey-full | 006.7/8 |
dewey-hundreds | 000 - Computer science, information, general works |
dewey-ones | 006 - Special computer methods |
dewey-raw | 006.7/8 |
dewey-search | 006.7/8 |
dewey-sort | 16.7 18 |
dewey-tens | 000 - Computer science, information, general works |
discipline | Informatik |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV037465119 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-12-24T01:07:51Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781439830826 |
language | English |
lccn | 2010037120 |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-022617000 |
oclc_num | 838420612 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-20 |
owner_facet | DE-20 |
physical | XXXI, 308 S. Ill. |
publishDate | 2011 |
publishDateSearch | 2011 |
publishDateSort | 2011 |
publisher | CRC Press |
record_format | marc |
spellingShingle | Sarna, David E. Y. Implementing and developing cloud computing applications Datenverarbeitung Wirtschaft Cloud computing Business Data processing BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Production & Operations Management bisacsh COMPUTERS / Information Technology bisacsh COMPUTERS / Software Development & Engineering / General bisacsh Cloud Computing (DE-588)7623494-0 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)7623494-0 |
title | Implementing and developing cloud computing applications |
title_auth | Implementing and developing cloud computing applications |
title_exact_search | Implementing and developing cloud computing applications |
title_full | Implementing and developing cloud computing applications David E. Y. Sarna |
title_fullStr | Implementing and developing cloud computing applications David E. Y. Sarna |
title_full_unstemmed | Implementing and developing cloud computing applications David E. Y. Sarna |
title_short | Implementing and developing cloud computing applications |
title_sort | implementing and developing cloud computing applications |
topic | Datenverarbeitung Wirtschaft Cloud computing Business Data processing BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Production & Operations Management bisacsh COMPUTERS / Information Technology bisacsh COMPUTERS / Software Development & Engineering / General bisacsh Cloud Computing (DE-588)7623494-0 gnd |
topic_facet | Datenverarbeitung Wirtschaft Cloud computing Business Data processing BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Production & Operations Management COMPUTERS / Information Technology COMPUTERS / Software Development & Engineering / General Cloud Computing |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=022617000&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT sarnadavidey implementinganddevelopingcloudcomputingapplications |