Thursday, September 29, 2022

 

This article discusses using the checklist for architecting and building multitenant solutions. Administrators will find that this list is familiar to them. 

 

The checklist is structured around business and technical considerations as well as the five pillars of the Azure well-architected framework.  These pillars include 1) Reliability, 2) Security, 3) Cost Optimization, 4) Operational Excellence, and 5) Performance efficiency.  The elements that support these pillars are Azure well-architected review, azure advisor, documentation, patterns-support-and-service offers, reference architectures and design principles. Out of these, cost optimization is one of the primary benefits of using the right tool for the right solution. It helps to analyze the spend over time as well as the effects of scale out and scale up. The Azure Advisor can help improve reusability, on-demand scaling, reduced data duplication, among many others. Performance is usually based on external factors and is very close to customer satisfaction. Continuous telemetry and reactiveness are essential to tuned up performance. The shared environment controls for management and monitoring create alerts, dashboards, and notifications specific to the performance of the workload. Performance considerations include storage and compute abstractions, dynamic scaling, partitioning, storage pruning, enhanced drivers, and multilayer cache.

Operational excellence comes with security and reliability. Security and data management must be built right into the system at layers for every application and workload. The data management and analytics scenario focus on establishing a foundation for security. Although workload specific solutions might be required, the foundation for security is built with the Azure landing zones and managed independently from the workload. Confidentiality and integrity of data including privilege management, data privacy and appropriate controls must be ensured. Network isolation and end-to-end encryption must be implemented. SSO, MFA, conditional access and managed service identities are involved to secure authentication. Separation of concerns between azure control plane and data plane as well as RBAC access control must be used.

The checklist for business considerations include 1. understanding what kind of solution is being created such as business-to-business, business-to-consumer, or enterprise software 2. Defining the tenants in terms of number and growth plans, 3. Defining the pricing model and ensuring it aligns with the tenants’ consumption of Azure resources. 4. Understanding whether we need to separate the tenants into different tiers and based on the customer’s requirements, deciding on the tenancy model. Finally, promoting the multitenant solution in the commercial marketplace.

The technical considerations emphasize design and service-level objectives, as well as the scale of the solution. It also suggests applying Chaos engineering to test the reliability of the solution. The security considerations involve Zero Trust and least privilege principles.


 

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