Infrastructure and Security Challenges Threaten Multi-Cloud and Edge Deployments, New Survey from Volterra Shows
March 9, 2020Volterra, an innovator in distributed cloud services, today announced the results of a new global survey of more than 400 IT executives showing that organizations face major infrastructure and security challenges in supporting multi-cloud and edge deployments. Conducted by Propeller Insights, the survey reveals that multi-cloud deployments are being driven primarily by a need to maximize availability and reliability for applications, while at the edge IoT is the top use case driving deployments. However, multi-cloud deployments are threatened by security and connectivity problems due to differences between cloud providers, as well as operational challenges in managing workloads across several clouds. Meanwhile, edge deployments suffer from an inability to meet unique infrastructure needs as well as difficulties in managing apps across different edge sites.
“The increasing deployment of
technologies including AI, machine learning and IoT are causing apps and data
to be increasingly spread across multiple clouds and edge sites. This is
leading to a number of serious operational and security challenges for
organizations trying to support multi-cloud and edge deployments,” said Ankur
Singla, CEO and founder, Volterra. “In this survey, we found 70% of IT leaders
think it’s ‘very important’ to have a consistent operational experience between
the edge and public and private clouds. But as the data shows, there are
tremendous issues preventing this within edge sites and multiple clouds.
Volterra was founded with the mission to bridge those gaps and enable
organizations to easily deploy, connect, secure and operate apps across a
distributed cloud environment.”
Benefits and Barriers in Multi-Cloud Deployments
Ninety-seven percent of IT leaders surveyed indicated that they are planning to distribute workloads across two or more clouds. Respondents identified three key reasons for putting the same workloads at multiple cloud providers:
- Maximizing availability and reliability (63%)
- Meeting regulatory and compliance requirements (47%)
- Leveraging best-of-breed services from each provider
(42%)
Multi-cloud deployments yield
better availability and reliability by ensuring that if one cloud happens to go
down, the app will still be available in another cloud. It’s also advantageous
for regulatory and compliance reasons as it allows organizations to keep an
app’s data in a specific geographic region if local law mandates it. Finally,
multi-cloud enables organizations to leverage the unique advantages of each
cloud, such as Google Cloud Platform’s strength in machine learning or
Microsoft Azure’s seamless integration with Office 365 databases.
But major issues with security, connectivity reliability and performance, and inconsistent service offerings make it difficult to efficiently deploy and operate multi-cloud deployments. When asked about the biggest challenges in managing workloads across different cloud providers, IT leaders highlighted as the top problems:
- Secure and reliable connectivity between providers (60%)
- Different support and consulting processes (54%)
- Different platform services (53%)
Furthermore, respondents indicated
that their biggest challenges when connecting between cloud providers for a shared
workload are security (54%), reliability (44%), and performance (39%).
Edge Cloud Adoption and Challenges
Propeller
Insight’s survey data around edge
computing shows that organizations are deploying apps at the edge to primarily
support IoT (57%), smart manufacturing (52%) and content delivery (46%).
Respondents explained that their organizations are putting these workloads at
the edge rather than public or private clouds because they need to control and
analyze data for these use cases locally (54%) and there’s too much latency
when sending edge data to public cloud-based apps (47%).
However, edge deployments also face serious challenges, with managing infrastructure and apps across numerous edge sites posing potential barriers to success. When asked to identify the biggest business concerns about having apps at the edge, IT execs pointed to:
- The difficulty in managing apps across multiple edge locations (44%)
- An
inability to accommodate the IT infrastructure needed to host and operate
at edge (38%)
Furthermore, when asked to
described the more specific technical challenges at the edge, respondents
called out the difficulty of integrating cloud-native workflows like
automation, CI/CD and performance management (69%) and trouble installing a
full set of application infrastructure (compute/storage/network/security) (67%).
The survey also looked at the challenges of managing edge deployments over the longer term, revealing that the two biggest challenges to operating edge apps for their entire lifecycle are:
- The lack of resources or time to keep applications and infrastructure up-to-date (37%)
- Managing
distributed clusters as siloed instances rather than a single resource
(26%)
“There are a few key themes that
jump out from the data and illustrate why organizations are struggling with
multi-cloud and edge deployments,” said Ankur Singla. “For multi-cloud
deployments, the biggest challenges are security, connectivity and operations.
There simply isn’t enough visibility across cloud platforms and it’s impossible
for organizations to establish consistent policies or a common operational
experience. For edge deployments, the biggest challenges are accommodating
infrastructure needs and managing apps across different edge sites.”
“These issues reflect the major headaches that come from trying to manage apps distributed across multiple clouds or disparate edge sites with the current tools available. The status quo simply won’t work any longer. Organizations need a way to manage all these components as a single, distributed cloud to effectively leverage multi-cloud and edge deployments and the data within them,” said Singla.