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by Just1689
2274 days ago
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I think this introduces some interesting points to the DR and BCP conversation. Is it a safe bet that we can rely on the cloud to have capacity? Normally I wouldn't doubt it but in this sort of situation is becomes more likely they will be put under capacity stress. Will the cloud vendors learn and build slack in? I think they're very lean operations and maybe this kind of slack would damage the profitability too much. If the cloud vendors can't guarantee capacity ( I suspect this will be the conclusion ) then what does they mean for our DR and BCP planning? |
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Then you're very misinformed.
As a cloud administrator, I see resource availability and account limits on a weekly basis going back years.
I tell people:
- to pre-provision at least some extra servers rather than wait for an autoscaling operation to fail.
- that new instance types often are rolled out gradually, and lead time is often 1 month in AWS
- that killing a 1000-node cluster then expecting to immediately rebuild it often doesn't work.
- for DR and BCP planning, each region (or AZ) should be able to handle enough load at all times in case one region (or AZ) is unavailable. I've never seen anybody do that, even after I told them, because cost.