ElasticHosts

ElasticHosts
Private company
Industry Cloud computing
Founded 2008 (2008)
Headquarters London, England
Key people
Richard Davies, CEO
Website www.elastichosts.com

ElasticHosts is a computer service provider based in London, England. It was founded in March 2008,[1][2] and provides cloud computing service, provided from nine data centres;[3][4] in the United Kingdom (two sites), Netherlands, United States (five sites), Canada, Hong Kong and Australia.

Company

ElasticHosts is privately held and competes with other public cloud-infrastructure providers such as Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud and Rackspace Cloud.[5][6] According to CEO Richard Davies, the company aims to provide servers that are set up as similar as possible to how one would provision dedicated hosting, with the exception that the customer can self-serve at any time.[7]

ElasticHosts' EU hosting data centres are in the UK and not Ireland. It is the first public [8] cloud service built on Linux Kernel-based Virtual Machine (rather than Xen), and it has an API that has been given a good review from a REST perspective.[9] It charges for resources (CPU, memory, disk and network) as separate entities, allowing customers to build virtual machines with widely different characteristics instead of simply categorized ones, such as small, medium and large instances.[10]

ElasticHosts (and therefore licensees) are supported directly by BoxGrinder included in Fedora 15 as of May 2011.[11][12][13]

Services

ElasticHosts Cloud Servers are available from eleven data centres; San Jose, Los Angeles, San Antonio, Dallas, Miami, Maidenhead (UK), Portsmouth (UK), Amsterdam, Toronto, Hong Kong and Sydney.

Storage

ElasticHosts only has persistent storage, based on local host store. However, in 2012 it announced solid-state drives (SSD) for all instance sizes.[15] It does not use a storage area network, but instead has directly-attached RAID arrays, with iSCSI interconnects between hosts. In 2011 the CEO predicted a greater demand for storage.[16]

Elastic IP addresses

ElasticHosts has two types of IPv4 addresses - static and dynamic. Both are allocated from the same pools of addresses, but static addresses are kept by the account, and can be allocated to any account's server at any time. Dynamic ones are randomly allocated for any server that has not been specifically allocated a static IP address. These are not guaranteed to remain the same, though remain for the lifespan of the instance. A shutdown of the virtual machine may or may not reallocate the IP address. ElasticHosts does not lock a static IP to a server instance - they can be reallocated from the control panel. Reverse DNS is managed by the customer from the control panel.[17]

Elastic Containers

Elastichosts announced on 14 April 2014 that in addition to maintaining their traditional cloud VM business, they were releasing an alternate type of server, based on linux running within containers. This implementation, similar to chroot or BSD jails uses the more advanced Linux kernel Control Groups feature, which the company deemed mature enough to use as the basis for a new type of cloud server, launched under the name "Elastic Containers".[18] Claiming this as a world first in terms of virtualization, the company currently offers versions of Debian, Ubuntu and Centos - though because of the nature of the containers, all run with the host's Linux kernel. Containers in and of themselves are not a new technology, with the cgroups features first begun being added to the Linux kernel in 2007; and other companies such as Docker Inc. producing software that uses them to virtualize applications; this is claimed as the first time an IaaS provider has used the technology for full operating system use.

Various press articles focused on the newly released pay as you go billing option, whereby the container can optionally be billed for actual usage, as opposed to some fixed instance size, in 15 minute increments; where the common industry standard is 1 hour time blocks for cloud server rentals.[19][20] In particular the CEO's claim that customers could save up to 50% on traditional costs using the service.[21] Some analysts expressed confidence that container based systems had to be the future for cloud providers; "Given the fiercely competitive nature of cloud pricing these days, it’s hard to see how containers won’t become a dominant mechanism for delivering cloud services."[22] though others wondered whether this would actually pull customers from the dominating players in the market - Owen Rogers, senior analyst for digital economics at 451 Research, noted that though the “interesting and unique” model did give Elastichosts an advantage, with the "... rest of the market ... still based on virtual machines, and I can¹t see this changing overnight”; but wondered whether "... consumers really care about ElasticHosts’ more detailed – and arguably fairer – method of pricing, when its bigger competitors are slashing prices" [23]

See also

References

  1. "ElasticHosts makes cloudy servers newbie friendly". Theregister.co.uk. Retrieved 2016-09-30.
  2. elastichosts (2008-03-19). "The Foundation of ElasticHosts". Elastichosts.com. Retrieved 2016-09-30.
  3. elastichosts. "Data Centres". Elastichosts.com. Retrieved 2016-09-30.
  4. "U.K.'s ElasticHosts opens cloud data centre in Toronto | IT World Canada News". Itworldcanada.com. 2012-01-17. Retrieved 2016-09-30.
  5. Jennifer Scott (2009-08-06). "ElasticHosts launches UK cloud service". IT PRO. Retrieved 2016-09-30.
  6. 04 August 2009 (2009-08-04). "ElasticHosts targets SMEs with flexible cloud service". V3. Retrieved 2016-09-30.
  7. Cohen, Reuven (2008-11-17). "ElasticHosts Launches first KVM based Cloud Service". ElasticVapor. Retrieved 2016-09-30.
  8. "Experiences of Interoperability across Cloud Infrastructures using OpenNebula" (PDF). Ogf.org. Retrieved 2016-09-30.
  9. "Pricing | ElasticHosts Linux, Windows VPS Hosting". Elastichosts.com. Retrieved 2016-09-30.
  10. Marek Goldmann (2011-04-19). "Support for new Clouds is coming!". BoxGrinder. Retrieved 2016-09-30.
  11. "Build plugins". BoxGrinder. Retrieved 2016-09-30.
  12. "BoxGrinder adds support for ElasticHosts". Elastichosts.com. 2011-04-20. Retrieved 2016-09-30.
  13. "ElasticStack 2.0 allows clouds to catapult SANs". Theregister.co.uk. Retrieved 2016-09-30.
  14. "ElasticHosts Offers High-Performance SSD Cloud Hosting To All Customers, Refreshes User Interface". Press release. ElasticHosts. 5 September 2012. Retrieved 27 August 2013.
  15. Simon Quicke (13 October 2011). "Data centre spending heading back to pre-recession levels". MicroScope. Retrieved 27 August 2013.
  16. "How do I set reverse DNS for my static IP addresses?". Elastichosts.co.uk. 2010-07-16. Retrieved 2016-09-30.
  17. "Elastic Containers - Revolutionary new cloud servers". Elastichosts.com. 2014-04-14. Retrieved 2016-09-30.
  18. Jane McCallion (2014-04-09). "ElasticHosts debuts new pricing model". Cloud Pro. Retrieved 2016-09-30.
  19. Matthew Finnegan (2014-04-09). "ElasticHosts: Linux container virtualisation allows us to beat AWS on price | IT Leadership". Computerworld UK. Retrieved 2016-09-30.
  20. "ElasticHosts Leverages Containers to Lower Cloud Pricing". Itbusinessedge.com. 2014-04-09. Retrieved 2016-09-30.
  21. Jim Mortleman (2014-04-09). "UK cloud pioneer scores world first with true utility pricing". Computerweekly.com. Retrieved 2016-09-30.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/30/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.