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Cloud

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"The cloud" refers to servers that are accessed over the Internet, and the software

and databases that run on those servers. Cloud servers are located in data centers
all over the world. By using cloud computing, users and companies do not have to
manage physical servers themselves or run software applications on their own
machines.

What is the Cloud Diagram


The cloud enables users to access the same files and applications from almost any
device, because the computing and storage takes place on servers in a data center,
instead of locally on the user device. This is why a user can log in to their
Instagram account on a new phone after their old phone breaks and still find their
old account in place, with all their photos, videos, and conversation history. It
works the same way with cloud email providers like Gmail or Microsoft Office 365,
and with cloud storage providers like Dropbox or Google Drive.

For businesses, switching to cloud computing removes some IT costs and overhead:
for instance, they no longer need to update and maintain their own servers, as the
cloud vendor they are using will do that. This especially makes an impact for small
businesses that may not have been able to afford their own internal infrastructure
but can outsource their infrastructure needs affordably via the cloud. The cloud
can also make it easier for companies to operate internationally, because employees
and customers can access the same files and applications from any location.

How does cloud computing work?


Cloud computing is possible because of a technology called virtualization.
Virtualization allows for the creation of a simulated, digital-only "virtual"
computer that behaves as if it were a physical computer with its own hardware. The
technical term for such a computer is virtual machine. When properly implemented,
virtual machines on the same host machine are sandboxed from one another, so they
do not interact with each other at all, and the files and applications from one
virtual machine are not visible to the other virtual machines even though they are
on the same physical machine.

Virtual machines also make more efficient use of the hardware hosting them. By
running many virtual machines at once, one server becomes many servers, and a data
center becomes a whole host of data centers, able to serve many organizations.
Thus, cloud providers can offer the use of their servers to far more customers at
once than they would be able to otherwise, and they can do so at a low cost.

Even if individual servers go down, cloud servers in general should be always


online and always available. Cloud vendors generally back up their services on
multiple machines and across multiple regions.

Users access cloud services either through a browser or through an app, connecting
to the cloud over the Internet � that is, through many interconnected networks �
regardless of what device they are using.

What are the main service models of cloud computing?


cloud service models
Software-as-a-Service (SaaS): Instead of users installing an application on their
device, SaaS applications are hosted on cloud servers, and users access them over
the Internet. SaaS is like renting a house: the landlord maintains the house, but
the tenant mostly gets to use it as if they owned it. Examples of SaaS applications
include Salesforce, MailChimp, and Slack.

Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS): In this model, companies don't pay for hosted


applications; instead they pay for the things they need to build their own
applications. PaaS vendors offer everything necessary for building an application,
including development tools, infrastructure, and operating systems, over the
Internet. PaaS can be compared to renting all the tools and equipment necessary for
building a house, instead of renting the house itself. PaaS examples include Heroku
and Microsoft Azure.

Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS): In this model, a company rents the servers and


storage they need from a cloud provider. They then use that cloud infrastructure to
build their applications. IaaS is like a company leasing a plot of land on which
they can build whatever they want � but they need to provide their own building
equipment and materials. IaaS providers include DigitalOcean, Google Compute
Engine, and OpenStack.

Formerly, SaaS, PaaS, and IaaS were the three main models of cloud computing, and
essentially all cloud services fit into one of these categories. However, in recent
years a fourth model has emerged:

Function-as-a-Service (FaaS): FaaS, also known as serverless computing, breaks


cloud applications down into even smaller components that only run when they are
needed. Imagine if it were possible to rent a house one little bit at a time: for
instance, the tenant only pays for the dining room at dinner time, the bedroom
while they are sleeping, the living room while they are watching TV, and when they
are not using those rooms, they don't have to pay rent on them.

FaaS or serverless applications still run on servers, as do all these models of


cloud computing. But they are called "serverless" because they do not run on
dedicated machines, and because the companies building the applications do not have
to manage any servers.

Also, serverless functions scale up, or duplicate, as more people use the
application � imagine if the tenant's dining room could expand on demand when more
people come over for dinner! Learn more about serverless computing (FaaS).

What are the different types of cloud deployments?


In contrast to the models discussed above, which define how services are offered
via the cloud, these different cloud deployment types have to do with where the
cloud servers are and who manages them.

The most common cloud deployments are:

Private cloud: A private cloud is a server, data center, or distributed network


wholly dedicated to one organization.
Public cloud: A public cloud is a service run by an external vendor that may
include servers in one or multiple data centers. Unlike a private cloud, public
clouds are shared by multiple organizations. Using virtual machines, individual
servers may be shared by different companies, a situation that is called
"multitenancy" because multiple tenants are renting server space within the same
server.
Hybrid cloud: hybrid cloud deployments combine public and private clouds, and may
even include on-premises legacy servers. An organization may use their private
cloud for some services and their public cloud for others, or they may use the
public cloud as backup for their private cloud.
Multi-cloud: multi-cloud is a type of cloud deployment that involves using multiple
public clouds. In other words, an organization with a multi-cloud deployment rents
virtual servers and services from several external vendors � to continue the
analogy used above, this is like leasing several adjacent plots of land from
different landlords. Multi-cloud deployments can also be hybrid cloud, and vice
versa.

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