Category Archives: Cloud Servers
Rackspace Open Cloud Offers Easily Scalable Computing — and Freedom From Vendor Lock-in
SAN ANTONIO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--
Today, Rackspace (RAX), the service leader in cloud computing, announced the unlimited availability of Cloud Databases and Cloud Servers powered by OpenStack, along with a powerful and elegant new Control Panel. These solutions, backed by Rackspaces renowned Fanatical Support, further expand Rackspaces broad Cloud hosting portfolio, which is used today by over 180,000 customers worldwide.
The introduction of these open cloud products marks the first time any company has deployed a large-scale open source public cloud powered by OpenStack. Customers can now select from private, public or hybrid offerings and have the flexibility to deploy their solutions in a Rackspace data center or another data center of their choice.
Rackspaces open cloud products also give application developers and IT organizations in businesses large and small the ability to build, test and deploy applications in the cloud for the first time without being locked-in.
Rackspace is disrupting the current model of how IT is consumed, said Lanham Napier, CEO of Rackspace. We have delivered on our promise to implement OpenStack in our cloud offerings, and to free customers from the vendor lock-in that they face at other major cloud providers. Were delivering open, high-performance, scalable and easy-to-use cloud solutions, while empowering customers to choose features, services, prices and locations based on the needs of their business. At the heart of Rackspace is Fanatical Support, which means we put our customers needs and wants first. Today, we are extending this approach by giving the market an open alternative, enabling them to choose how and where they use the cloud.
Rackspaces expansive open cloud portfolio includes not only Cloud Servers and Databases, but also Cloud Files object storage with a content delivery network, Cloud Sites platform as a service for .NET and PHP,load balancers, and monitoring.
Our experience with the open Rackspace Cloud products has been absolutely seamless, said Nand Mulchandani, CEO of ScaleXtreme. One of the things we found right away is that it is completely standards-compliant and we didnt have to make any changes to our OpenStack APIs. Also, the new control panel is much richer, much simpler and a lot faster than the previous version. Customers will find it a completely new experience, although the core functionality is familiar.
The new Cloud Servers powered by OpenStack deliver increased efficiency, scalability and agility to customers, who can launch as many as 200 reliable cloud servers in 20 minutes.
Cloud Servers highlights:
The new Rackspace Cloud Servers began delivering business value to us and our customers almost instantly, said Tom Lounibos, CEO of SOASTA. We were able to easily integrate them into our performance testing platform, CloudTest and we have successfully spun up thousands of servers for real-world online and mobile app testing. When we conduct testing around large initiatives such as the 2012 LondonOlympics, the ability to scale quickly is an absolute must. We are seeing what a difference the OpenStack API is making. Making API calls to spin up servers is so much faster now, and thats crucial for a performance and load testing solution like SOASTA.
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Rackspace Open Cloud Offers Easily Scalable Computing — and Freedom From Vendor Lock-in
NAT – Building a Multi-Tiered Cloud Application – Video
31-07-2012 23:20 Welcome to the Network Address Translation (NAT) segment of Dimension Data's demonstration on how to build a multi-tiered cloud application. This eight part video series will take you through every aspect you need to consider to setup the networking, Cloud Servers, load balancing, NAT, firewalls and security necessary to build a typical three tier application (web, application and data tiers) in the Dimension Data Cloud. In this segment, we explore how to use the web-based user interface to expose your Cloud Servers to the public Internet using NAT.
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NAT - Building a Multi-Tiered Cloud Application - Video
Servers – Building a Multi-Tiered Cloud Application – Video
31-07-2012 23:18 Welcome to the Servers segment of Dimension Data's demonstration on how to build a milti-tiered cloud application. This eight part video series will take you through every aspect you need to consider to setup the networking, Cloud Servers, load balancing, NAT, firewalls and security necessary to build a typical three tier application (web, application and data tiers) in the Dimension Data Cloud. In this segment, we explore how to customise the CPU, RAM and Storage for a Cloud Server.
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Servers - Building a Multi-Tiered Cloud Application - Video
BUILDINGS Magazine Says Cbeyond Cloud Servers Reduce Energy Consumption and Costs
ATLANTA, July 23, 2012 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Cbeyond Inc. (CBEY), a leading provider of cloud and network services to small and mid-sized businesses, today announced that its cloud servers were voted a top money-saving product for 2012 by the editors of BUILDINGS magazine. Cbeyond's cloud servers were recognized for their ability to help buildings significantly reduce energy consumption, decrease capital expenses and improve operational efficiency.
Power can represent as much as 71 percent of costs in a typical office building, according to National Grid. With summer temperatures and power bills soaring, building owners and managers seeking innovative money-saving ideas can turn to Cbeyond. Outsourcing power-hungry servers helps lower costs plus aid in efforts to achieve Energy Star and LEED certifications.
"Energy costs can drain the profits from an office building," said Chris Ortbals, vice president of cloud services product management at Cbeyond. "By outsourcing server equipment management, building managers can shift some of the burden to Cbeyond. They get the added benefit of reducing their environmental footprint."
Cbeyond's award-winning cloud data center was recently cited in a Green Data Center report by Pike Research for its utilization of multiple energy-optimization strategies.
For more information about Cbeyond's suite of small and medium sized business IT and communications solutions, visit http://www.cbeyond.net. To view a social media version of this press release, please click here.
About Cbeyond
Cbeyond, Inc. (CBEY) is the technology ally for small and mid-sized business. Our private, proactively-managed IP network connects customers to voice, data and enterprise applications hosted in our award-winning cloud data centers. Since 1999, Cbeyond has served the unmet needs of businesses through technology and service innovation. We were the first company to build an IP network specifically for small businesses and among the few to offer sales and service professionals onsite. Today, our expanded portfolio helps customers reduce the burden of outlaying capital and manpower to manage infrastructure. Creating an exceptional customer experience is in our DNA. It's why more than a third of our 60,000+ customers come from referrals. For more information on Cbeyond, visit http://www.cbeyond.net and follow Cbeyond on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/Cbeyondinc.
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BUILDINGS Magazine Says Cbeyond Cloud Servers Reduce Energy Consumption and Costs
Cloud Computing: CloudPassage Extends Halo to Cloud-y Windows Servers
Starting July 24, CloudPassage will extend its SaaS Halo cloud server security to cloud servers running Windows in public and hybrid cloud environments.
The company found in a recent survey that 74% of cloud users are running a mix of both Windows and Linux servers in the cloud.
It estimates that Windows servers, which are exposed to exploits such as the recent RDP vulnerabilities announced by Microsoft, make up more than 40% of the public IaaS market. Halo guards against attacks in the cloud and protects RDP and other sensitive services, while automating other Windows cloud server security tasks.
Since Halo, which is advertised as the first security and compliance platform purpose-built for elastic cloud environments, already supports all the major Linux distributions, users and cloud providers can centrally manage dynamic firewalls across multiple operating systems, lock down administrative and application ports with what is supposed to be a unique SMS-powered multi-factor authentication service, and be notified of critical cloud server security events.
451 Research wades in with the observation that "Enterprises aren't looking for a piece-meal solution, but one that will address vulnerabilities in any environment, so they can rest assured that their cloud servers are secure."
Obviously it helps that the security is automated particularly in highly scalable deployments and handles security policies across Windows and Linux servers as a single group.
Halo manages server security configuration, host-based firewalls, intrusion detection and server account auditing from one system.
Halo includes GhostPorts multi-factor authentication, which now supports SMS authentication for cloud servers to help customers control access to administrative and other applications. CloudPassage says protecting access to administrative servers like Windows RDP is critical in the cloud, where there is no outer layer of access control and administrative ports are often left open to the world.
Besides the coming Windows 2008R1 and R2 support, Halo supports Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Fedora, CentOS, Debian, Ubuntu and Amazon Linux. It runs on servers in any public or private cloud environment, including Amazon EC2, Rackspace, GoGrid, VMware, OpenStack and other virtualization and cloud stacks.
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Cloud Computing: CloudPassage Extends Halo to Cloud-y Windows Servers
Testing the limits of cloud scalability: Real-world results
July 12, 2012, 12:41 PM PDT
Takeaway: Thoran Rodrigues describes a recent experience that involved spinning up 70 cloud servers for an intensive data-processing project. Here is what he learned from this real-world experiment.
Scalability is probably the greatest promise of cloud computing. In the infrastructure level, it translates to being able to quickly deploy new virtual servers from existing machines and then drop these servers when they arent needed anymore. Not only that, but it should be simple and easy to scale each individual server up and down as needed, adding or removing processors, RAM, and storage space. If we look at the whole cloud stack, scalability at this level is more than a promise: it is a necessity.
Without scalability at the infrastructure level, there can be no auto-scaling cloud platforms that transparently increase available resources to accommodate application needs, nor can we have applications that have a large variability in the number of users at any time without the need for peak load provisioning.
Over the course of the past month, I had the opportunity to test the limits of infrastructure-as-a-service scalability by running a computing and network intensive process on several servers. Id like to share the key points of this experience and the lessons learned throughout.
This experiment wasnt really a test, but rather a process I was running for a client. This actually makes it more interesting, because its a real production environment, rather than a simple or controlled test. This means it was under all the traditional pressures and requirements of a production environment, such as availability, redundancy, and so on. The process consisted of running several web searches (on both search engines and regular websites), followed by heavy HTML, XML, and JSON processing, string matching, file format adjustments, and so on.
I made an estimate that running this process on a single 1 CPU, 1GB RAM server would take more than a year, but the client wanted the results in less than a month. The only way to deliver was to break the process down into smaller blocks that could be run on separate servers at the same time: enter parallelization and cloud scalability. By saving a basic machine image and replicating it dozens of times, then processing each small block on a separate server, Id be able to finish everything up much faster.
In the end, my input data was broken down into 70 different blocks, so I set out to deploy 70 cloud servers using a standard cloud provider (Rackspace in my case) as fast as I could. In this case, I opted to deploy the cloud servers through the control panel, instead of via the API, just to see what would happen. The first thing I did was create the simplest possible Windows server (1 processor, 1 GB RAM, 40GB Disk), prepare the image and save it, so that I could later quickly create new servers from this image.
For those who are new to this virtual server thing: creating the image correctly can save you a lot of time. If your servers are all going to have the same directory structures with the same installed programs and so on, preparing the first image properly means that you dont have to worry about it with any of the others. And if, like me, you are going to run a process on several files but have excess disk space, copy everything to the first server. Since the images are full disk images, all files get copied, and you can actually save that setup time.
So I had my machine image created and started deploying new servers. The first 37 went up without a hitch, in less than an hour. Thats more than one new server every two minutes, an impressive rate. Upon trying to spin up server number 38, however, I got an interesting surprise: the Rackspace console started returning a failure upon creating the server with the following message: Account has exceeded update limit. Try again at [YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM]. Please call [X-XXX-XXX-XXXX] if you have any questions. I got in touch with their excellent customer service, who quickly replied that all accounts come with a built-in limit of 50GB of RAM usage. While it was easy enough to increase that limit (just open up a support ticket), this limitation should be more visible. In fact, Rackspace support informed me that the only way to get at the current limit was through their API, which makes no sense.
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Testing the limits of cloud scalability: Real-world results
Web Host Gandi Adds 'Simple Hosting' for US Market
San Francisco, CA, July 9, 2012 Gand i, a leading domain name registrar and cloud hosting provider, today launched Gandi Simple Hosting, a service which combines the price and simplicity of shared hosting with the flexibility and power of Cloud technology. Developed in response to customer demand, Gandi Simple Hosting gives individuals and companies a quick, powerful and secure way to create complex sites with applications and databases, without needing great expertise or financial resources. Gandi is making it possible to run its Simple Hosting servers in the U.S. for the first time today.
Gandi Simple Hosting, a Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) hosting solution, supports many popular LAMP (Linux Apache MySQL, PHP) applications, giving customers the benefits of a true virtual machine hosting solution without the complexity of VPS servers or associated administration.
Gandi plans to enhance the Simple Hosting platform to support other popular dedicated platforms, like Ruby and Java, in future releases.
Other simple hosting solutions are often offered as part of a shared hosting platform, adding security and performance issues, said Thomas Stocking, VP of U.S. Operations, Gandi. Our research indicates that our customers want the benefits of true virtual machine hosting, without the complexity of VPS servers and the associated administration. This LAMP-stack PaaS is in answer to their many requests for such a solution.
Added Stocking: This service opens the U.S. market for Gandi customers content, and makes it easier to provide content to this market for small businesses in the U.S. and internationally. Traditionally, a Content Delivery Network (CDN) is used to distribute content worldwide, but most small businesses do not want the complexity or cost of a CDN. This new service allows them to create simple, easy web sites that reach millions of people.
Availability: Gandi Simple Hosting is available now to all Gandi customers. For more information, please visit: https://www.gandi.net/hosting/simple#main-nav
About Gandi Founded in 1999, Gandi is a major international domain name registrar and cloud hosting provider. Gandi manages more than 1.3 million domain names and 163 extensions. Offering a world-class alternative to purely commercial registrars, and a low-cost, innovative, cloud hosting platform, Gandi provides hosting for a community of people working on technology that enables the Internet for business, while also advocating for the free and unrestricted sharing of information and the promotion of the resp ect of individual rights. Organizations that Gandi.net supports include Creative Commons, EFF, and Students for Free Culture, among others. You can follow Gandi on Twitter @gandibar. For more information, please visit: http://www.gandi.net or call 410 429-7402.
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Web Host Gandi Adds 'Simple Hosting' for US Market
G-Cloud : Free MT4 VPS for Forex Trading by GCMFX – Video
05-07-2012 08:52 Free VPS to customers of GCMFX, with the lowest possible latency to our trading servers, along with the most secure
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G-Cloud : Free MT4 VPS for Forex Trading by GCMFX - Video
12 Cloud service orchestration with Juju Hrnjadovic – Video
05-07-2012 19:12 Cloud service orchestration with Juju Muharem Hrnjadovic, Senior Engineer at the Swiss Seismological Service Cloud services are typically comprised of many different service units eg load balancers, web/app/db servers etc. While existing tools (eg chef, puppet) help configure these particular pieces, Juju focuses on the overall orchestration by exposing re-usable service units allowing one to quickly wire up, adjust, scale and tear down entire services. Since juju is capable of deploying into a number of different clouds (currently: OpenStack and AWS) it also helps avoiding vendor lock-in. My focus is on the construction of industrial strength software systems. In my current role as a Senior Engineer with the Swiss Seismological service I am mostly concerned with technological sense-making, problem solving and the transformation of time to code. Open Cloud Day 2012 Bern
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12 Cloud service orchestration with Juju Hrnjadovic - Video
Cloud Server and Cloud Services Hosting – Video
05-07-2012 16:17 CloudStack based cloud server and cloud services hosting with free hosted Exchange, firewalls, vpn, and load balancers.