Google Cloud Platform Blog
MaestroDev taps Compute Engine to provide cost-effective task management for DevOps environments
Monday, March 24, 2014
Today’s post comes from Brett Porter, CTO of MaestroDev, a DevOps Automation service for enterprise-class companies.
MaestroDev
helps software teams automate every task in a software delivery cycle, so that agile and continuous integration teams can ship higher-quality code faster. Every step of the software development process -- build, test, release, and deploy -- can be managed with a few drags and clicks. Our customers have already chosen their favorite tools; MaestroDev makes those tools work harder.
To say performance and high availability are important to us is an understatement. We cater to software development teams which are often distributed around the world, so we really have no choice but to perform and scale consistently and to provide 24/7 availability. To achieve this level of performance in a cost-effective manner, last quarter we began moving all of our servers to
Google Compute Engine
.
Immediately, we experienced significant time savings. Compute Engine helps us quickly deploy large clusters of virtual machines, and then scale up or down quickly. With Compute Engine, it takes about a minute to stand up a complete development environment. For example, one of our customers, the International Health Terminology Standards Development Organisation (IHTSDO), recently moved from a fixed amount of hardware hosted in a datacenter to our SaaS offering on Compute Engine. They immediately realized more build capacity, reduced risk from machine failures, and 80% cost reduction.
A key benefit of Compute Engine is that it allows us to provide a cost-effective product to our customers. Compute Engine charges in granular increments called
Sub-Hour Billing
, which means we’re able to offer our customers a unique, consumption-based pricing model that is ideal for today’s software development teams. Other orchestration tools charge a license fee and a per-agent fee, effectively pricing out SMBs and small teams at large companies, and artificially limiting throughput performance of development teams, often when they need processing power the most. Our consumption pricing allows granular cost increments, so that users can start small, pay as they go, and scale up gracefully -- only paying for the service as they actually use it. We wouldn’t have been able to offer this subscription plan without the flexibility of Compute Engine.
Google’s partnership with
RightScale
was the icing on the cake. RightScale is a leader in enterprise multi-cloud management, and our products are deeply integrated. Together we can automate the deployment of products into RightScale environments, and RightScripts can dynamically scale new dev/test environments as needed. Google’s partnership with RightScale means our customers can simply point existing Rightscale templates to Compute Engine, without wasting time manually re-configuring instances.
We’re a fairly lean organization here at MaestroDev, so the performance, scalability, and cost-effectiveness of Compute Engine enable us to tackle problems for enterprise-level software development teams around the world.
-Contributed by Brett Porter, CTO, MaestroDev
No comments :
Post a Comment
Don't Miss Next '17
Use promo code NEXT1720 to save $300 off general admission
REGISTER NOW
Free Trial
GCP Blogs
Big Data & Machine Learning
Kubernetes
GCP Japan Blog
Labels
Announcements
56
Big Data & Machine Learning
91
Compute
156
Containers & Kubernetes
36
CRE
7
Customers
90
Developer Tools & Insights
80
Events
34
Infrastructure
24
Management Tools
39
Networking
18
Open Source
105
Partners
63
Pricing
24
Security & Identity
23
Solutions
16
Stackdriver
19
Storage & Databases
111
Weekly Roundups
16
Archive
2017
Feb
Jan
2016
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2015
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2014
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2013
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2012
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2011
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2010
Dec
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2009
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Mar
Feb
Jan
2008
Dec
Nov
Oct
Sep
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Feed
Subscribe by email
Technical questions? Check us out on
Stack Overflow
.
Subscribe to
our monthly newsletter
.
Google
on
Follow @googlecloud
Follow
Follow
No comments :
Post a Comment