This is a continuation in a series of articles on Multitenant Applications. The previous articles talked about tenant-to-tenant migration and this article talks about tenant management in that context.
One of the first tenant decisions is how many to
have. Each tenant is distinct, unique, and separate from all other tenants. A
single tenant is one that has a single Azure AD tenant, with a single set of
accounts, groups, and policies. Permissions and sharing of resources are
facilitated by this central identity provider. Multiple tenants are created
when there is administrative isolation, decentralized IT, historical decisions,
mergers, acquisitions or divestitures, clear separation of branding for a parent
company, pre-production, test or sandbox tenants. Some restrictions apply in
providing services to users and intertenant collaboration such as a central
location for files, conversations, calendars etc. must be set up for users to
collaborate more effectively.
Prior to cross-tenant migration such as for
mailboxes, it was required to completely offboard a user mailbox from the
current tenant to on-premises and onboard them to a new tenant. Cross-tenant
migration allows administrators to move artifacts such as mailboxes with
minimal dependencies in their on-premises systems.
A tenant allows a central location and one or
more satellite locations to facilitate data residency in specific datacenters
while the tenant information is mastered centrally and synchronized into each
geo-location. When a new datacenter is added to a tenant in a new geo-location,
it’s possible to migrate the organization’s core customer data at rest to the
new location. Opening a new datacenter does not impact existing usages of the
organization’s data.
The set of products and number of licenses for
each requires some planning to ensure that there are enough licenses from the
users’ accounts that need advanced features and that there are sufficient
licenses but not too many unassigned licenses based on staffing.
A summary of the steps for tenant management
includes how many tenants are there or needed, what products or licenses must
be purchased for each tenant, whether a tenant needs to be multi-geo to comply with data requirements, whether
inter-tenant collaboration must be setup, whether one-tenant must be migrated
to another and whether core data from one datacenter must be moved to a
new one.
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