From our perspective, the future of cloud computing is open. This requires more than open source code, important as that is. It also requires, among other attributes, APIs that are open, pluggable and extensible. This lets users add features, providers and technologies from a variety of vendors or other sources. Critically, the API itself cannot be under the control of a specific vendor or tied to a specific implementation, but must be under the auspices of a third-party organization that allows for contributions and extensions in an open and transparent manner.
This is a pretty good description of the approach taken by the Apache Deltacloud Project. Deltacloud was initiated by Red Hat and is now a project hosted at the Apache Software Foundation. The community that has grown around Deltacloud develops it under and is governed by the ASF's collaborative and meritocratic principles. Deltacloud's fundamental goal is to abstract differences across clouds. It does so using a variety of techniques that provide consistency while making it possible to leverage functionality present within different clouds to the maximum degree possible. For example, a technique known as introspection lets cloud providers advertise optional capabilities, which can then be used when present. All of this helps avoid the “lowest common denominator” problem that can be an issue with cross-platform APIs.
Deltacloud's goal, therefore, is not to be yet another cloud provider API but to meet the needs of users who want to be able to operate a hybrid cloud computing environment as seamlessly as possible. (Red Hat CloudFormsTM is an open hybrid cloud management product that leverages Deltacloud as one of its upstream projects for just this reason.)
Deltacloud is also a highly modular architecture, which provides a great deal of choice in both how users communicate with Deltacloud and which cloud providers it supports.
With its 1.0 release, Deltacloud offers a variety of front-ends, which is to say interfaces through which users make a request to a cloud provider. New is a basic Amazon EC2 front-end, which can be used to communicate with a variety of cloud providers using the popular Amazon Web Services interface. This is primarily intended for users looking to migrate between EC2 and another cloud provider.
This new EC2 interface joins the RESTful front-end that implements the Cloud Infrastructure Management Interface (CIMI) from the DMTF's Cloud Management Working Group. CIMI defines a logical model for the management of resources within the Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) domain. This standards effort has gained broad industry support; the draft model and protocol lists over 60 contributors or authors. For those interested in nitty-gritty detail about CIMI, a variety of detailed work-in-progress specification documents can be found on the DMTF site.
There's also a Deltacloud “classic” RESTful front-end that implements an API developed prior to the availability of the CIMI work within the DMTF.
Deltacloud's back-end, i.e. what talks to the cloud providers themselves, is equally modular. Cloud provider-specific code is encapsulated within what's called a “driver.” This allows support for new cloud providers to be implemented independently of other components of Deltacloud. Among other advantages, this makes it easier for cloud providers to write their own drivers should they wish to do so.
The Deltacloud driver list is already quite expansive. The full support matrix is available on the project site, but it includes compute and/or storage providers for cloud providers such as Amazon, Rackspace, Fujitsu Global Cloud Platform, IBM Smart Business Cloud, OpenStack, Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization and VMware vSphere. (In this context, “cloud provider” means any infrastructure that can provide resources for a hybrid cloud—including virtualization management platforms.)
Combine the modular front-end and the modular back-end and you get what David Lutterkort, chair of the Apache Deltacloud Project Management Committee and Red Hat Principal Software Engineer, calls an “n:m proxy.” A front-end talking to a back-end. Talk industry-standard CIMI to a public cloud with a provider-specific API. Talk Amazon EC2 to OpenStack. And do so using client libraries written for a wide variety of languages. Your choice.
Learn more about Deltacloud here. Learn more about Red Hat CloudFormsTM here.
Sull'autore
Altri risultati simili a questo
Ricerca per canale
Automazione
Novità sull'automazione IT di tecnologie, team e ambienti
Intelligenza artificiale
Aggiornamenti sulle piattaforme che consentono alle aziende di eseguire carichi di lavoro IA ovunque
Hybrid cloud open source
Scopri come affrontare il futuro in modo più agile grazie al cloud ibrido
Sicurezza
Le ultime novità sulle nostre soluzioni per ridurre i rischi nelle tecnologie e negli ambienti
Edge computing
Aggiornamenti sulle piattaforme che semplificano l'operatività edge
Infrastruttura
Le ultime novità sulla piattaforma Linux aziendale leader a livello mondiale
Applicazioni
Approfondimenti sulle nostre soluzioni alle sfide applicative più difficili
Serie originali
Raccontiamo le interessanti storie di leader e creatori di tecnologie pensate per le aziende
Prodotti
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux
- Red Hat OpenShift
- Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform
- Servizi cloud
- Scopri tutti i prodotti
Strumenti
- Formazione e certificazioni
- Il mio account
- Supporto clienti
- Risorse per sviluppatori
- Trova un partner
- Red Hat Ecosystem Catalog
- Calcola il valore delle soluzioni Red Hat
- Documentazione
Prova, acquista, vendi
Comunica
- Contatta l'ufficio vendite
- Contatta l'assistenza clienti
- Contatta un esperto della formazione
- Social media
Informazioni su Red Hat
Red Hat è leader mondiale nella fornitura di soluzioni open source per le aziende, tra cui Linux, Kubernetes, container e soluzioni cloud. Le nostre soluzioni open source, rese sicure per un uso aziendale, consentono di operare su più piattaforme e ambienti, dal datacenter centrale all'edge della rete.
Seleziona la tua lingua
Red Hat legal and privacy links
- Informazioni su Red Hat
- Opportunità di lavoro
- Eventi
- Sedi
- Contattaci
- Blog di Red Hat
- Diversità, equità e inclusione
- Cool Stuff Store
- Red Hat Summit