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What is hybrid cloud? The ultimate guide

By Stephen J. Bigelow

A hybrid cloud is a cloud computing environment that uses a mix of on-premises, private cloud and third-party public cloud services with orchestration among these platforms. This environment typically involves a connection from an on-premises data center to a public cloud. The connection can also involve other private assets, including edge devices or additional cloud services, such as storage.

The concept of hybrid cloud computing reflects today's notion that IT resources and services aren't singular or ubiquitous, but rather a complex and dynamic mix of hardware, applications, resources and services. All those varied assets can be operated from many providers and delivered to an enterprise on demand from countless global locations.

This comprehensive guide examines the inner workings of hybrid cloud infrastructures -- their benefits, challenges, applications, use cases, management tools and future trends. Links throughout this page connect to related TechTarget articles providing greater insights, new developments and expert advice critical to planning, implementing and maintaining hybrid cloud in the enterprise.

How do hybrid clouds work?

With hybrid cloud, enterprises deploy workloads in private IT environments or public clouds -- including IaaS, PaaS and SaaS -- and can often move workloads and data between them as computing needs and costs change. This setup provides a business greater flexibility and more data deployment options. Hybrid cloud workloads include the network, hosting and web service features of an application. A typical hybrid cloud can simultaneously involve the following common components:

All these elements can create a complex web of workloads and data that businesses increasingly struggle to manage cost-effectively.

While the terms are sometimes discussed interchangeably, there are key differences between hybrid and multi-cloud models. A hybrid cloud creates a single environment to operate on-premises private resources, public cloud resources -- such as those offered by Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud Platform -- and the services offered by PaaS and SaaS providers. A multi-cloud environment consists of two or more public cloud providers but doesn't require a private or on-premises component. For instance, a business that deploys certain workloads in AWS and other workloads in Azure is using a multi-cloud strategy.

Hybrid cloud architecture

Establishing a hybrid cloud requires the following four main components:

  1. At least one public infrastructure as a service (IaaS) platform, such as AWS, Azure or Google.
  2. Private computing resources, such as an on-premises data center, which typically includes some private cloud capability.
  3. An adequate network connection to the hybrid cloud's private and public cloud environments.
  4. A common software platform capable of discovering, operating and managing private and public cloud elements as a unified, highly automated, policy-driven environment.

Hybrid cloud networking

A strong network connection is critical to a successful hybrid cloud strategy. Typically, the connection involves a WAN or dedicated networking service for additional security. A company should consistently evaluate its connection and ensure it meets the bandwidth, latency and uptime (availability) requirements specified in any service-level agreement with a cloud provider.

Hybrid cloud integration

An enterprise has no direct control over a SaaS or public cloud (IaaS) architecture. That means a business must adjust its resources, environments, policies and workflows to make them compatible with its chosen public cloud platform's resources, services and APIs. Suitable hardware would need to be implemented in the data center, including servers, storage, a LAN and load balancers. For an effective hybrid arrangement, these on-premises resources and environments must be able to integrate and interoperate with public cloud services and APIs. Cloud providers often supply models and best practices that can accelerate business integration and adoption.

The following are two main approaches to hybrid cloud integration:

  1. Use the cloud as the front-end application hosting point. This approach essentially relies on one element of the hybrid architecture, such as the public cloud, and uses other resources, such as the data center, for auxiliary or fallback operations. Implementation is often easier and faster, but it poses more limitations on flexibility.
  2. Create a unified elastic resource pool of data center and cloud functions. This approach endeavors to treat all public and private elements equally from the ground up. It creates a more flexible and ubiquitous hybrid cloud environment but can be more difficult and time-consuming to implement.

Consider the following questions to determine the right integration strategy:

Hybrid cloud platforms

Hybrid cloud architecture traditionally builds a virtualization layer or hypervisor on top of on-premises resources to create and support VMs and, increasingly, container-based workloads. On top of this layer, IT teams install a private cloud software layer, such as VMware Apache CloudStack, OpenNebula or OpenStack, which delivers various cloud capabilities, including self-service access to services, such as compute or database instances; automation and orchestration; resilience; and billing. This layer is integrated into services and APIs from public cloud providers.

A newer hybrid cloud architecture approach involves public cloud providers offering hybrid cloud platforms that extend public cloud services into private data centers. Everything is based on the same software stack. These hybrid cloud platforms connect public and private resources in different ways, but they often incorporate common industry technologies, such as Kubernetes to orchestrate container-based services.

Examples of hybrid cloud platforms include AWS Outposts, Azure Stack, Azure Arc, Azure VMware Solution, Google Anthos, Nutanix Cloud Infrastructure, Nutanix Cloud Clusters, VMware Cloud Foundation and VMware Cloud on AWS.

Public cloud vs. private cloud

By definition, the hybrid cloud model includes public cloud and private cloud components.

The public cloud component relies on a third-party provider for on-demand IT resources, such as VMs, applications and storage, as well as services like data analytics, over the internet or a dedicated network. Public cloud providers host workloads and deliver cloud services to multiple organizations.

The private cloud component typically uses on-premises architecture, either in a company's local data center or a separate physical infrastructure provided by a third party, such as Azure Stack. Private clouds can also be based on virtualization software. Whatever the specific private cloud approach, organizations do not share private cloud resources with other users.

There are several tradeoffs to consider between on-premises and cloud computing, including the following:

Organizations planning a hybrid approach need to consider how they'll move workloads between private and public clouds. Hybrid cloud migration strategies include lift and shift, refactoring and redesign.

What are the benefits of hybrid cloud?

Hybrid cloud computing enables an enterprise to deploy its most sensitive workloads in an on-premises cloud, connect to workloads and data sources hosted by independent SaaS and PaaS providers and host less critical resources on third-party public cloud PaaS and IaaS providers. This approach provides organizations with the best of private and public cloud models.

The core benefits of hybrid cloud include the following:

Other hybrid cloud advantages include consistency and support for more standardization in IT management practices.

Hybrid cloud challenges

Along with the benefits come hybrid cloud challenges that CIOs must address and resolve, including the following:

Hybrid cloud security

Underpinning all hybrid cloud challenges in one form or another are security issues that inherently surround publicly accessible cloud environments and the transfer of sensitive workloads across distributed clouds.

Single hybrid cloud is now multiple clouds, said IBM cloud security architect Mark Buckwell during the RSA Conference in April 2023, pointing to the reticence of businesses to fully trust their precious assets residing up there. "They still don't want to move the crown jewels of the organization off premise into cloud," Buckwell said, "so we end up integrating different parts of an application with different components, sitting on different technologies… And that just makes the whole solution a lot more complex because now we have data flowing in all sorts of different places."

Top-of-mind issues for chief information security officers (CISOs) include a centralized security architecture, vendor compatibility and accountability, technology integration, API exposure, visibility and governance. And most of all, CISOs need to meet business goals and compliance edicts by ensuring on-premises security controls and processes coexist with native-cloud technologies.

What are hybrid cloud use cases?

Before implementing a hybrid cloud infrastructure, first consider several hybrid cloud use cases and their advantages, disadvantages and remedies to determine whether this architecture fits the company's IT and business needs.  The following are some of the more common hybrid cloud use cases to evaluate:

Hybrid cloud management tools

Hybrid cloud architecture comprises multiple environments and types of components, making hybrid cloud management a complex task. Fortunately, there are strategies and tools to help resolve the complications of hybrid management and create a streamlined approach across environments.

Implement hybrid cloud management practices to maximize control of distributed environments. For example, to create a consistent, unified approach across the various components, establish a cloud governance policy that defines standard processes for resource configurations, access control and other important operations.

Management tools geared to increasingly distributed cloud environments can centralize the deployment and administration of data, applications and workloads across hybrid architectures that mix private infrastructure with public cloud resources. They include the following:

Centralized control of on-premises and cloud-based resources with a hybrid cloud management tool set provide cost and performance monitoring, security, reporting and analytics. Hybrid cloud management tools include CloudBolt, Embotics, Flexera Cloud Management Platform, IBM Turbonomic, Morpheus Data, Nutanix Cloud Manager Cost Governance (formerly Beam) and Scalr. Explore and test different features within your environment to choose the hybrid cloud management tool that suits your organization's particular hybrid architecture needs.

Infrastructure-as-code tools can also help manage hybrid deployment. Ansible, Chef, HashiCorp's Terraform, Puppet and Salt, for example, all provide hybrid cloud management capabilities. Adopting containers and Kubernetes orchestration is another way to unify and seamlessly migrate the resources in a hybrid architecture.

For secure movement of workloads across environments, vendors such as Microsoft and Palo Alto Networks provide cloud security posture management tools that automate risk management and compliance requirements to continuously monitor cloud-based systems for vulnerabilities and misconfigurations.

What's in store for hybrid cloud?

As with most advanced technologies, hybrid cloud infrastructure, tools and services are rapidly evolving and expanding. For companies modernizing their business operations, hybrid cloud's embrace of AI, edge computing and integration promises unique levels of flexibility, security and control. But moving data, applications and workloads across distributed cloud environments increases complexity as well as modernization costs. New control planes in hybrid cloud tools provide some relief by improving all aspects of management in the cloud and on premises.

Following are some of the top hybrid cloud trends in 2024 and beyond as seen by industry veterans:

Stephen J. Bigelow, senior technology editor at TechTarget, has more than 20 years of technical writing experience in the PC and technology industry. Ron Karjian is an industry editor and writer at TechTarget covering business analytics, artificial intelligence, data management, security and enterprise applications.

Sarah Neenan contributed to this article.

12 Jan 2024

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