6533b7dafe1ef96bd126e078
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Assessing Cloud Infrastructure Costs in Communications-Intensive Applications
Oleksiy MazhelisKuan Eeik TanJari HiltunenPasi Tyrväinensubject
Factor costRisk analysis (engineering)Software deploymentbusiness.industryComputer scienceTotal costOverhead (business)Information technology managementCloud computingTotal cost of ownershipbusinessEconomies of scaledescription
By deploying cloud infrastructure services, companies strive at achieving faster time to market, improved scalability, lower up-front costs, and lower IT management overhead, among other benefits. However, in longer term, the use of cloud infrastructure may incur significant costs; furthermore, these costs depend both on the required infrastructure resources and on the mode of infrastructure deployment. Therefore, the choice of a particular deployment mode should be justified with a systematic analysis of the associated costs. In this paper, a model for assessing the costs of alternative cloud infrastructure deployment scenarios is introduced. This model decomposes the infrastructure costs into a set of cost factors derived from academic and practitioner literature. A virtual central processing unit (vCPU) is used in the model as a basic system construction element, to which—assuming a virtualised environment—the identified cost factors are assigned. By estimating and aggregating individual cost factors, the total costs associated with a particular deployment scenario can be derived, analysed and compared against the costs of other available deployment options. The cost analysis in this paper focuses on the case of communication-intensive services, where the network data transfer contributes the most to the overall service cost structure. In particular, the in-house, cloud-based and hybrid infrastructure deployment alternatives are analysed. The results of the analysis suggest that the cost of such applications may be minimized by allocating the communication capacity to a single point of service—either in-house or in public cloud—thus benefiting from the economy of scale present in purchasing the capacity.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2012-01-01 |