Rackspace and HPE offering OpenStack as private cloud service
With most of the chatter in the cloud computing market focused on the big public cloud providers, it’s easy to forget that private cloud is a viable option for many larger enterprises. Now, Rackspace and Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) are looking to change that, reports Enterprise Cloud News (Banking Technology’s sister publication).
The two companies are planning to offer a new hosted private cloud service based on the OpenStack platform and designed for large-scale enterprises with specific application needs.
With the new service, the private cloud can be hosted within the enterprise’s on-premises data centre, within Rackspace’s data centre, or co-located at different facilities, according to Scott Crenshaw, EVP of private cloud at Rackspace.
Rackspace will provide the cloud support, as well as the software and APIs to connect the platform to the business. The cloud itself will be built on HPE’s Gen10 servers, and the company will also control the capacity that customers buy as they scale up.
Depending on the contract, either Rackspace or HPE will be responsible for fixing or upgrading the hardware that underpins the cloud platform.
In Crenshaw’s view, companies are making more strategic decisions about what cloud platform is needed for different types of apps, which is leading to a multi-cloud scenario, where private cloud is a viable option along with the big public cloud Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) offerings.
“Over the last 12 months, we have seen that enterprises have moved away from an ad hoc process of accessing their cloud to a much more methodical process, and looking at their application portfolio and making a strategic decision for each application and where it should run,” Crenshaw told Enterprises Cloud News. “As this transition is happening, companies are starting to realise that private cloud is the best for the majority of enterprises workloads… it’s not about one platform being superior to others but finding the right platform that works for your application.”
The renewed interest in private cloud, Crenshaw says, is two-fold: The first is ease of migration and the second is cost. The approach that Rackspace and HPE are attempting addresses both issues since the companies are offering pay-as-go pricing and managing the workloads for customers as part of the service.
At the same time, this offering is single-tenant and customers are not sharing compute, networking or storage resources, ensuring data privacy and security.
The two companies also plan to offer similar, private cloud services based on VMware’s software-defined data centre offerings and Microsoft Azure Stack in the first half of 2018.
Rackspace and NASA first developed OpenStack as a cloud platform about seven years ago, although it has been eclipsed by the large-scale public cloud providers. Since then, Rackspace has been cutting deals with Amazon Web Services, Azure and Google Cloud Platform to offer managed services with those platforms.
Last week, the OpenStack Foundation, which administers the platform, held its fall summit in Australia and detailed how the software has evolved to encompass more uses around integration and operations.