Infrastructure as a service

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Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) is the delivery of computer infrastructure (typically a platform virtualization environment) as a service.

These 'virtual infrastructure stacks'[1] are an example of the everything as a service trend and shares many of the common characteristics. Rather than purchasing servers, software, data center space or network equipment, clients instead buy those resources as a fully outsourced service. The service is typically billed on a utility computing basis and amount of resources consumed (and therefore the cost) will typically reflect the level of activity. It is an evolution of web hosting and virtual private server offerings.

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[edit] History

The original term Hardware as a Service(HaaS) was first coined by the economist Nicholas Carr in RoughType, Mar 2006 [2] but this has essentially been superseded by Infrastructure as a service (IaaS) (which started to circulate in late 2006 with firms such as Savvis[3], BlueLock[4], ZDNet[5], and Tier 3[6]).

[edit] Key components

Implementations typically include the following layered components:

[edit] Key characteristics

The key characteristics of Infrastructure as a service include[citation needed]:

  • Resources delivered as a service including servers, network equipment, memory, CPU, disk space, data center facilities,
  • Dynamic scaling of infrastructure which scales up and down based on application resource needs
  • Variable cost service using fixed prices per resource component
  • Multiple tenants typically coexist on the same infrastructure resources
  • Enterprise grade infrastructure allows mid-size companies to benefit from the aggregate compute resource pools

[edit] See also


[edit] References