All Change how the economics of Cloud will make you think differently about Java

Post on 16-Apr-2017

830 views 2 download

Transcript of All Change how the economics of Cloud will make you think differently about Java

All Change!

https://www.flickr.com/photos/teegardin/

why the economics of Cloud will make you think differently about Java

CON6441 – JavaOne 2015

2

Important DisclaimersTHE INFORMATION CONTAINED IN THIS PRESENTATION IS PROVIDED FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY. WHILST EFFORTS WERE MADE TO VERIFY THE COMPLETENESS AND ACCURACY OF THE INFORMATION CONTAINED IN THIS PRESENTATION, IT IS PROVIDED “AS IS”, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED. ALL PERFORMANCE DATA INCLUDED IN THIS PRESENTATION HAVE BEEN GATHERED IN A CONTROLLED ENVIRONMENT. YOUR OWN TEST RESULTS MAY VARY BASED ON HARDWARE, SOFTWARE OR INFRASTRUCTURE DIFFERENCES.ALL DATA INCLUDED IN THIS PRESENTATION ARE MEANT TO BE USED ONLY AS A GUIDE.IN ADDITION, THE INFORMATION CONTAINED IN THIS PRESENTATION IS BASED ON IBM’S CURRENT PRODUCT PLANS AND STRATEGY, WHICH ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE BY IBM, WITHOUT NOTICE. IBM AND ITS AFFILIATED COMPANIES SHALL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE USE OF, OR OTHERWISE RELATED TO, THIS PRESENTATION OR ANY OTHER DOCUMENTATION. NOTHING CONTAINED IN THIS PRESENTATION IS INTENDED TO, OR SHALL HAVE THE EFFECT OF: - CREATING ANY WARRANT OR REPRESENTATION FROM IBM, ITS AFFILIATED COMPANIES OR ITS OR THEIR SUPPLIERS AND/OR LICENSORS

Steve Poole – IBM Making Java Real Since Version 0.9

DevOps Practitioner (whatever that means!)

@spoole167

This talk is about how this sort of measurement:

GB/hrIs already changing your life & the direction of the Java ecosystem

The ‘Cloud’ has a lot to answer for

Outline• Part 1 – The economics of Cloud provisioning• Part 2 - How Java measures up• Part 3 – The API economy and Java• Part 4 – wrap up

Part 1 – The economics of Cloud provisioning

Why ‘Cloud’ ?

A local, hand-crafted, static environment which requires in-house specialist

support, doesn’t scale well and requires long term investment and commitment

http

s://w

ww.fl

ickr.c

om/p

hoto

s/sy

lvar

/

What ‘Cloud’ promises

a virtual, dynamic environment which maximizes use, is infinitely scalable, always available and needs minimal upfront investment or commitment

Take your code – host it on someone else's machine and pay only for the

resource you use for the time you use it

AND be able to do that very quickly and repeatedly in parallel

How quickly do you need to get good code into production?

• Would you believe < 1hr?

• Case Study: A fashion retailer can show measureable increase in sales if a item similar to that seen in the media can be placed on their on-line store landing page within 1 hr of it appearing in public.

• Each product placement is different so they need a fast, agile, approach that does not jeopardize their on-line stores availability and quality.

• We know how to do this..

Cloud computing is real. Major vendors are providing substantial capacity and it’s growing all the time

Businesses see the opportunities

Improved value for money, decreased time-to-market, shorter time to value“I can now get my ideas into production in hours,days or weeks. I can get immediate feedback AND then I can improve the idea and repeat”

70% of IT Leaders are pursuing a hybrid

cloud strategy

http://www.fodey.com/generators/newspaper/snippet.asp

Hybrid Cloud is coming to a data centre near you

http

s://w

ww.fl

ickr.c

om/p

hoto

s/sk

ohlm

ann/

The ability to have ‘cloud burst’ capacity is changing the way software is being designed, developed and supported

We’re moving to a more industrial scale

v1 v2 v3

time

computecapacity

V1 V1.1

V1.2

V1.3

V1.4

V1.5 V1

.6 V1.7

v1 v2

time

computecapacity

We’re moving to a more industrial scale

v3

• Why buy one computer for a year when you can hire 365 computers for a day..

(Or a hour or a minute or a millisecond)

https://www.flickr.com/photos/vuhung/

“Compute on demand” – it’s what we always wanted

Cloud EconomicsWe really are getting closer all the time to

‘Compute on Tap’

https://www.flickr.com/photos/leunix/

But with taps come meters…

https://www.flickr.com/photos/beigephotos/

Cloud Economics

Cloud computing: compute == money

Money changes everything

With a measureable and direct relationship between $£€¥ and CPU/RAM, disk etc the financial success or failure of a project is even easier to see

And that means…

Even more focus on value for money.

American Society of Civil Engineers

Someone will be

looking at your

leaky app

Part 2 - How Java measures up

Compute == money

Easier than ever before

a business can buy a CPU

Just for how long they need it.

No long term capital

investment.

Just as much as they need

$ == GB/hr-Xmx: $100

So what do I get for the money?

Real costs – it’s confusingOffering RAM Cost CPUs

IBM Bluemix (CF) $24.15 GB/Month 4vCPUs per instance

IBM Bluemix (Containers) $ 9.94 GB/Month 4vCPUs per GB

run.pivotal.io $21.60 GB/Month 4vCPUs per instance

Heroku (Hobby) $14.00 GB/Month 1 "CPU share" per 512MB in an instance

Heroku (Professional) $50.00 GB/Month 1 "CPU share" per 512MB in an instance

Amazon EC2 (SLES) $16.56 GB/Month 1 vCPU per 4GB in an instance.

Example costs

Bluemix (CF) Amazon (ECS)

Running a 512mb container for a year

$289.80 for 4 cpus 198.72 for 1 cpu

Reducing memory footprint by 10% saves

$28.98 $0

Running 10 containers in parallel

2890.80 for 40 cpus

$1987.20 for 10 cpus

Reducing memory footprint by 10% saves

289.80 $0

Unnecessary baggage(you have loads)

Java applications have to get lighter.

Java 9 modularity will help but you have to consider footprint across the board.

Choose your dependencies wisely

Your choice of OS & distribution is important.

The aim is ‘carry on only’

Your application isn’t going on a long trip

http

s://w

ww.fl

ickr.c

om/p

hoto

s/arm

ydre

2008

/

Startup timesHow long do you want to wait?How long do you have to wait?

Do you need to preemptively start instances ‘just in case’ due to start up time?

To bad – that costs

BTW – think about this:

Everything that happens at startup – happens every time, all the time.

http

s://w

ww.fl

ickr.c

om/p

hoto

s/91

2951

17@

N08/

Java & fast startup time – It’s known for it!Application developers can reduce service

startup time by deferring optional costs to when its needed.

Maybe even create services with different behaviors rather than one with optional behavior

But it’s not enough

The JVM needs to revisit all the places where startup time was traded for throughput and turn them around.

what about

“ Everything that happens at startup – happens every time, all the time”

ConsequencesFor container based services start up effort happens multiple times during development and production

And it’s always the same result.AND you will pay $ for it every time

We don’t have a good way to capture all this effort or formalise starting a JVM from a precanned image. (Shared classes doesn’t hack it)

Other languages have better / faster startup!

http

s://w

ww.fl

ickr.c

om/p

hoto

s/dn

o196

7b/

http

s://w

ww.fl

ickr.c

om/p

hoto

s/qu

inna

nya/

https://www.flickr.com/photos/76657755@N04/

N-Body Memory Footprints (lower is better)

N-Body Completion Time (lower is better):

N-Body Completion Time, normalized for 100MB of memory (lower is better):

https://www.flickr.com/photos/isherwoodchris/

• Q: How much RAM does your application use?

• A: Too much

Runtime costs Most cloud providers will charge you for your RAM usage over time: $GB/hr. (Sometimes the charge is $0)

Increasing –Xmx directly effects cost. Something businesses can understand

Net effect – you’ll be tuning your application to fit into specific RAM sizes. Smaller than you use today.

You need to measure where the storage goes. You’ll be picking some components based onmemory usage

increasing the amount of memory for 1 service increases the bill by the number of concurrent instances

https://www.flickr.com/photos/erix/

SimplyJava applications are going to be running in a remote, constrained and metered environment

There will be precise limits on how much disk, CPU, RAM, Bandwidth an application can use and for how long

Whether your application is large or small, granular or monolithic. Someone will be paying for each unit used

That person will want to get the most out of that investment

Your application is going on a dietThe JVM needs to change

http

s://w

ww.fl

ickr.c

om/p

hoto

s/rvo

egtli

/

Part 3 – The API economyAnd what that means for Java

The API economyIf your company has data it will eventually be shared and monetized

Really.

Cloud APIs are one of the fastest growing areas in our industry.

Sharing data and services though APIs is enabling new opportunities and solutions Everyone is getting into the game.

What makes a good cloud api ?• roughly in selection order.

vailability 100% of course with performance SLAs

elievability – Are those published 100% metrics true?ost – how much and what’s the unit of measure? iagnosability – can users debug problems without you?xcitement – is there a vibrant community using the API?unctionality – what else can the API do?

Where you code runs day-to-day and moment-to-moment will be driven by

economics, legal requirements and how much risk your business wants to take.

Your code has to scale better, be more efficient, resilient, secure and work in

constrained environmentsYou will have to design, code, deliver, support and debug code in new ways

It’s going to be scary

How scary?

design, coding, deployment , startup, execution, scalingdebugging, security, resilience …

Almost everything about your

application is effected

http

s://w

ww.fl

ickr.c

om/p

hoto

s/m

jtmai

l/

Resilient applicationsDesign for short term failure: something fails all the time. Expect data and service

outages regularly

Fail and recover: don’t diagnose problems in running systems. Kill it and move on

Every IO operation you perform may fail – do as few as possible

Every IO operation may stall – costing you GB/hrs and resources– timeout everything quickly

Every piece of data you receive may be badly formed – check everything

Retry, compensation, backout strategies– these are your new friends

“Everything in the cloud fails all the time” : Werner Vogels

DebuggingRemote support for your family? Fancy having to do that for your own apps?

You have to assume:

You will never be able to log into a remote server.

You will never be able to attach a remote debugger to a failing app Ever.

All problems must be resolved by local reproduction or logs and dumps

http

s://w

ww.fl

ickr.c

om/p

hoto

s/ca

rbon

nyc/

DebuggingIt gets more challenging.

Failures during deployment or initial startup can be difficult or impossible to diagnose.

If your service instance didn’t start there is is little chance of logs being kept!

Learn to love logs, dumps and traces.

Remote log stores and tools are going to be your best friend

BTW: they’ll cost too

http

s://w

ww.fl

ickr.c

om/p

hoto

s/hi

nkel

ston

e/

Debugging• Q: Why can’t you just keep the

failed instance around?

• A: You can – if you accept the $$$ consequences…

Hard metrics and limits

keeping a failed app around or having apps

on standby can be costly in multiple ways

Runtime costs and taking up vital resource

allocation

Part 4 – wrap-up

It’s all changeHow you design, code, deploy, debug, support etc will be effected by the metrics and limits imposed on you.

Financial metrics and limits always change behavior. It also creates opportunity

You will have to learn new techniques and tools

The JVM and Java applications have to get leaner and meaner

http

s://w

ww.fl

ickr.c

om/p

hoto

s/bei

geph

otos

/

Multiple languages on the JVM.What’s the benefit of running

them on the JVM vs having a native service?

They can take more memory, and take longer to execute.

Cloud applications are increasingly heterogeneous.

Anyway they share data not objects

Nashorn JavaScript engine delivered in JDK8

Utilizes new JVM level features for performance

Avatar.js provides Node.js support on Nashorn

Results of “Octane” JavaScript benchmark using Java 8 pre-u20

Node.js is 4.8x fasterAvatar.js is >10x larger

Feb 12th, 2015: Avatar is “put on hold”

https://blogs.oracle.com/theaquarium/entry/project_avatar_update

More thoughts• Do we need a JVM anymore? If your container has code that will

ONLY run on one OS/arch do we need hardware abstraction like class files and bytecode?

• Modularity etc coming in Java 9 helps reduce footprint and some startup time.

• We need more AOT to convert Java into executable code once only

• Individual service lifetimes are short so dynamic recompilation is not useful unless the generated code is shared. How do we share compiled code cheaper than it costs to generate the code?

• Remember – you’ll be paying for all the ‘wasted’ CPU / RAM etc.

Summary1. Your business will need to adapt to ‘cloud’2. Your developers will need to adapt to ‘cloud’3. Your application will need to adapt to ‘cloud’4. Your competitors are already adapting

We don’t know all the answers (or even the questions) yet.We do know the next and largest ever pain point for Java is ‘cloud’Big changes are needed to keep Java successful and competitive

Your world is changing dramatically and all because of …

GB/hr

https://www.flickr.com/photos/pasukaru76/

The story ends – you wake up and Java is what’s it’s always been

You stay in wonderland and see how deep the Java goes

Thank you