Consortium GARR creates countrywide Federated Canonical OpenStack
By Canonical on 9 May 2017
https://insights.ubuntu.com/2017/05/09/consortium-garr-creates-countywide-federated-canonical-openstack-cloud/
GARR, Italy’s leading research and education network consortium,
manages a fully owned fibre optic network of 15,000 Km dedicated to
Italian Research and Education and offers high performance
connectivity and advanced services to around 4 million users and
over 1,200 research institutes, universities, research hospitals,
cultural institutions, libraries, museums and schools.
It has created a countrywide Federated OpenStack cloud using Ubuntu
OpenStack and Canonical’s model driven operations tools, MAAS and
Juju. Based on a federated architecture design that allows
institutions to contribute and share resources over multiple cloud
regions, GARR has been able to overcome the limitations of the basic
OpenStack software in order to deal with multiple tenancy,
partitioning and limiting the use of resources by automating the
whole deployment process.
GARR cloud infrastructure consists of data centres in 5 different
locations and has deployed Ubuntu OpenStack, the most widely used
OpenStack deployment in production clouds in the world today. At the
recent annual workshop GARR 2017, GARR demonstrated how they can
stand up a cloud remotely in 20 minutes and automate all the
maintenance with Juju and by using MAAS and Juju, GARR has achieved
levels of efficiency more commonly seen in the large data centres of
Google and AWS.
Juju also allows GARR to serve the long tail of science, allowing
researchers from any field to deploy self-service cloud
applications, chosen from a marketplace of open source software
available within Canonical’s Juju ecosystem. Juju Charms have become
an established ecosystem of best-in-class applications which use
shared, open source operations code for common components so CIOs
can focus precious resources on creating software that is unique to
their business. When it comes to deploying OpenStack with Charms,
having the repeatability of use while still maintaining flexibility
in the choice of the individual components, its configuration, and
architecture means the solution chosen can evolve and change
rapidly.
Commenting Giuseppe Attardi, coordinator of the Distributed
Computing and Storage Department, GARR: “The demand for cloud
services in research and education is taking momentum and Italy is
no exception. GARR is applying to cloud computing the same
successful community based model used for networking, setting up a
Federated cloud rather than resorting just to public clouds. It is
clear though that our cloud offering had to be competitive with
commercial offerings, hence it was necessary to rely on extensive
use of automation on OpenStack.
Canonical’s entire approach to model driven operations was our best
choice to achieve the right level of economics for run our service
competitively. Juju has also provided us with an application
marketplace that we can offer to our users and increases the take up
of our services. We are ourselves actively contributing to the Juju
application, in particular for teaching and e-learning, e.g. Moodle
in the Cloud and Jupyter Notebooks”.
“There can be many drivers for an organisation to adopt on premises
cloud solutions, such as OpenStack, versus using Public cloud
infrastructure. We have proven that with the right solution, it can
be cost neutral or in some cases, even more cost effective” said
Anand Krishnan, executive vice president, Canonical’s Cloud
Division. “Increasingly our customers are determining that a
toolset, common across the key infrastructures, helps deliver
maximum flexibility and efficiency. Ubuntu with Juju gives them
that.”
If you are attending OpenStack Boston this week, please stop by and
learn more about Ubuntu OpenStack and Juju at the Ubuntu booth B1.
About GARR
GARR is the Italian telecommunications network dedicated to the
world of Education and Research and offers high performance
connectivity and advanced services. The GARR network is built and
managed by the Consortium GARR, a non-profit organization founded
under the auspices of the Ministry of Education, University and
Research. The founding members are: CNR, ENEA, INFN and CRUI
Foundation, representing Italian universities. More information:
www.garr.it