Cloud-10 Risks with Cloud IT Foundation Tier

IT Foundation Tier of Cloud (or Data Center)
This layer contains the IT hardware and underlying datacenter technologies that enable clouds. The critical components of a cloud enabled datacenter are - Computing Hardware - Storage/Filers - Networking - Virtualization Technologies (Xen, VMWare,...) - Load Balancers and Management (both in hardware and software) -….

Some of the areas that IT foundation/Data Center tier needs to deal with are - Physical location of the DC (geography) - Availability of Resources like Power, Network (ISPs), Cooling - Scaling of computing hardware ( small servers vs. big super domes) - Logical Segregation Architecture (especially when dealing with Multi-Tenancy) - People (Controlling Administrative Access)

Security Risks
Data Center Disaster Recovery and Failovers

One of the biggest risk user's of a Cloud Foundation layer face is to handle disaster recovery and failover scenarios. Due to complexity of the virtualized data center and multi-dependency on underlying components MTBF (Mean time between Failures) becomes very low. There has been multiple incidents logged every week related to these [3].

Incident [1] with Xero a SaaS provider in New Zealand that went offline due to power failure in one of the 9 datacenters used by the underlying infrastructure provider Rackspace is a good example that shows how interdependencies if not mapped properly can cause failures. In this case the underlying service provider had 9 global data centers and failure of one should have been transparent to the customers.

Logical Isolation of Resources for Multi-Tenancy : If the Cloud DC is to be used by multiple tenants. An architecture to support logical separation of the resources at all the layers is essential i.e. Computing (Virtualization), Networking (Virtual Switches and VLANs) and Storage (logical separation of files with access controls) is required. Due to logical nature of these controls a lot will be dependent on keeping a very tight control on the configurations, that maintain these logical controls.

Google docs flaw that allowed unauthorized users to see personal files [6] is a good example.

Administrative Access Controls: Like in any Data Center, administrators generally will still have full access to all the resources. E.g. ability to clone a given Virtual-Machine or add a span port to snoop the traffic or even directly access a sensitive customer file. A very tight control starting with the background check of the administrator to full audit-ability and spot monitoring of all the activities performed by the administrative users is required.

An administrator at Amazon accidently deleted cloud resources causing outages [7].

Domino Effect and Dependencies in Cloud: As compared to the traditional 3 tier application architecture (Web/App/DB) most of the cloud applications/services have a very complex dependency. A cloud service may be using another Mashup or web service provisioned by another Cloud vendor. This can create Domino effect scenario where failure or delays in one service can impact multiple dependent services.

Virtualization and logical controls are still dependent on the underlying hardware. Failure in one can put unexpected load on to other resources making them fall one by one.

An Active-Active architecture where another hot standby active component takes up making the handover transparent to the consuming services.

Backups and Data Loss:

Storage within a Cloud solution many times is distributed across the data centers and have complex logical controls over the data such as encryption to keep multiple tenants segregated. IT foundation layer needs to ensure that the data gets backed up properly to ensure minimal data loss in case of any failures. It also need to ensure that the service or application can still perform if one of the node or DC is down. Amazon EC2 had an outage in 2007 that wiped out customer data [8].

There have also been incident where a storage provider (Mediamax [5]) seized operation leaving the data owned by the users/consumers inaccessible and in limbo.

Cloud Computing Wiki [4] is another good resource to look at incidents related to Cloud Computing.

Reference:
1. http://www.nbr.co.nz/article/xero-taken-offline-massive-us-data-centre-failure-104349 2. http://dcsblog.burtongroup.com/ 3. http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/2009/07/06/the-day-after-a-brutal-week-for-uptime/ 4. http://wiki.cloudcommunity.org/wiki/CloudComputing:Incidents_Database 5. http://www.demo.com/community/?q=node/160512 6. http://www.scmagazineus.com/Google-Docs-flaw-could-allow-others-to-see-personal-files/article/116703/?DCMP=EMC-SCUS_Newswire 7. http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/08/28/flexiscale_outage/ 8. http://www.datacenterknowledge.com/archives/2007/10/02/amazon-ec2-outage-wipes-out-data/