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Architect & Business Decision-Maker’s guide to Windows Azure

Architect & Business Decision-Maker’s guide to Windows Azure. Azure EAI Case Study Charles Young. Agenda. Business Problem & Solution Overview Warts and Wart Cream Reflections Questions. Accreditations. Worldwide Microsoft Partner Award Winner in 2007, 2011; runner up in 2009, 2010

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Architect & Business Decision-Maker’s guide to Windows Azure

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  1. Architect & Business Decision-Maker’s guide to Windows Azure Azure EAI Case Study Charles Young

  2. Agenda • Business Problem & Solution Overview • Warts and Wart Cream • Reflections • Questions

  3. Accreditations • Worldwide Microsoft Partner Award • Winner in 2007, 2011; runner up in 2009, 2010 • Microsoft Azure Circle Partner • Microsoft AzDPS provider • Microsoft Partner Advisory Councils • Worldwide SMS&P Partner • Microsoft Smart Teaming Partner • Trusted advisors to Application Platform team

  4. Enterprise Application Integration • Why? • Protect existing investments • ‘Stovepipe’ packaged applications • Data silos • Custom applications and services • Automating business processes • Driving efficiency and cost saving • Increasing Business agility • Reducing time-to-market • Implementing an enterprise architecture • Evolving service-orientation • Better run-time governance

  5. Enterprise Application Integration • Challenges… • Adaptation • Mediation • Routing • Orchestration • Reliability • Scalability • Security

  6. “We work in a highly sensitive and often challenging environment where our ability to deliver security services on time and in accordance with customers’ requirements requires an IT infrastructure that is equally reliable, secure and robust.” Steven Miles, Head of IT at G4S Secure Solutions • Manual system for requesting and assigning guards at client premises • Email and telephone based • Delays encountered in processing • Mistakes made in handling • Automated system • Seamless communication between multiple systems • Cloud based integration • For Customer • Integrated solution • Reduced errors and delays • Always available • With Cloud • No license costs • Inbuilt resilience • Vastly reduced on-going costs

  7. Azure Aspects • Built on Azure SDK v1.4 • Compute nodes • 3 worker roles • 1 web role • Azure Storage • Queues, Tables and Blob

  8. Solution Design

  9. Azure Usage • 6000 compute hours (per Month) • 1M storage transactions (per Month) • 38Gb storage usage • Live since June 2011

  10. Benefits of Azure • Fast build and delivery • Rich infrastructure • ‘Low ceremony’ packaging & deployment • Significant cost savings • No expensive licensing and capital expenditure costs • Savings of 30% of infrastructure costs • Scalability and elasticity • Reliability, resilience and disaster recovery

  11. Warts and Wart Cream • Monitoring and Auto-Scaling • AzureWatch from Paraleap

  12. Warts and Wart Cream • Watching message queue counts • Azure Storage Explorer (CodePlex)

  13. Warts and Wart Cream • Diagnosing Issues • Cerebrata Azure Diagnostics Manager

  14. Warts and Wart Cream • Managing endpoint connectivity • Each endpoint has separate role • Additional cost with little benefit • Managing on-premise maintenance. • Configuration

  15. Warts and Wart Cream • Reliable messaging • Used additional storage to implement ordered and exactly-once delivery • Service Bus queues provide • Ordered delivery • De-duplication • Atomicity (peek & lock) • Message Brokerage • Rudimentary approach • Service Bus • Topics and subscriptions with rules & filters

  16. Warts and Wart Cream • Enable RDP Access to Role Instances • Helps to diagnose configuration issues – particularly for web roles

  17. Reflections • Service Bus - Better basis for integration • Dynamic message brokerage • Enables hybrid scenarios • Better support for reliable messaging • but… • ‘raw’ capabilities – requires coding • E.g… • subscription management • throttling control • etc…

  18. Reflections - Adaptation • Where? • On-premises vs. off-premises • NEVER assume no on-premises footprint • How? • SOA façades • Forthcoming ‘Service Bus Connect’ • WCF LoB Adapter Kit • Azure Connect

  19. Reflections - Mediation • Where? • WCF service model (behaviours) • Worker roles • How? • Today – role your own • Tomorrow • XML Bridges • Service Bus Transforms

  20. Reflections - Orchestration • Where? • WF services • WF workflows in worker roles • No built-in integration with service bus • How? • Today – role your own • Tomorrow – Better approaches ‘promised’

  21. Reflections – Monitoring & Management • Limited capabilities of Azure Portal • Monitoring system health • SCOM integration • Managing systems • Endpoints • Subscriptions • Failed Message handling • Resume • Fix & Resubmit

  22. Reflections – Other Issues • Solid security infrastructure • Federated / SSO • Rudimentary service directory • No rules engine / framework • Building hybrid solutions • Don’t forget BizTalk Server!

  23. Questions? Use as many solution overview pages as you need to describe the vision/purpose of the solution, who the customers are, architecture, technologies, and most importantly, how and why you’re using Windows Azure. Also indicate what aspects of the solution you’re hoping to make progress on while in the lab.Be mindfunwe need to complete the deck in approximately 45 minutes.

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