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Windows Azure FAQ: The future in a cloud

Fabric Controller is Microsoft's 'secret sauce'

By John Fontana
October 30, 2008 12:00 PM ET

Network World - This week, Microsoft Corp. took the wraps off the cloud operating system that CEO Steve Ballmer hinted at earlier this month and that has been under development for two years under Chief Software Architect Ray Ozzie. Named "Azure," it is the foundation of what will become the hosting system that Microsoft will run, first in its own data centers and potentially licensed to other data center providers. The release is the first part of Microsoft's services platform, and it provides an outline for where Azure is going.

What is Azure?

Azure is Microsoft's operating system for cloud computing, code-named Red Dog, and will anchor the Azure Services Platform that Microsoft will run from its hosting data centers. Azure also is a development environment for builders of applications for the cloud.

What's with the name?

Azure is a blue color in the HSV color space, which is widely used to generate high-quality computer graphics. Blue sky. Clouds. Get it?

So it's just an operating system?

Yes and no. While Azure includes elements of Windows Server 2008 and its subsystems, it is a part of a separation of the operating system, infrastructure services and applications so each can be managed separately. That lets users upgrade applications or boost computing resources on the fly. Azure combines with layers of services that live on top of it -- infrastructure services such as security and application services -- to provide the complete cloud platform.

What are the other pieces?

There are three others currently. Storage, which equates to the file system in traditional operating systems; virtualization, which eases distribution of resources; and a desktop development environment which gives developers a minicloud they can run on their desktops.

What is this Fabric Controller?

Azure's secret sauce. It manages services including deployments, upgrades and configuration changes. It views data centers as one big environment of shared resources, and it orchestrates changes automatically based on the models developers create that define their services, such as how they should be implemented and how they should perform.

What is the difference between Azure and the Azure Services Platform?

Azure is the operating system. The platform is a combination of Azure, the infrastructure services layer and the online applications layer.

Can I get a copy of Azure for my network and create my own cloud?

Azure won't be a volume-licensed or off-the-shelf product.

Can I move my applications onto Azure and make them services?

Microsoft says there will be crossover, but given the architecture of Azure with its layers and Fabric Controller, current applications likely will need to be rewritten or rearchitected to work effectively -- or at all -- on Azure. Microsoft needs to clearly articulate how that will work. A foreshadowing is that Microsoft has already rewritten some of its .Net Framework services for the cloud model.

Reprinted with permission from NetworkWorld.com. Story copyright 2010 Network World, Inc. All rights reserved.
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