Tufin highlights three key challenges for data centre migration in 2015

Tufin®, the market-leading provider of Security Policy Orchestration solutions, is spearheading a drive to help companies understand and overcome the network and security challenges involved in migrating data centres. The company has outlined three key challenges to effective data centre migration faced by businesses - including application connectivity management, security and compliance - and how these can be overcome with the help of Tufin’s Orchestration Suite.

  • 9 years ago Posted in

Javvad Malik, Senior Analyst, Enterprise Security Practice, 451 Research says: “Data centre migrations aren’t a simple process and there are common traps that companies fall into. These range from lack of knowledge-sharing, over-reliance on firewalls, insufficient change management processes and poor roll back capabilities. During the migration process, assets like businesses-critical applications have to be documented properly - not only to maintain connectivity, but to ensure compliance. However, many companies fail to do the basics. This is where offerings like Tufin’s Security Policy Orchestration tools can help to accurately record changes, provide a helicopter view of network connections and ensure security and compliance isn’t negatively impacted.”


The key challenges are:
1. The need to understand your business applications in detail
Businesses lack knowledge of their applications and the various systems they connect to and depend on before the migration takes place. This is leading to applications not working and unplanned downtime as they struggle to pinpoint and rectify any unforeseen problems. What’s required is end-to-end application management, including tools for rapid application discovery, managing dependencies and business ownership across data centres, and increased control with application visibility.


2. Minimising disruption to the business during a migration
As well as application visibility, businesses require a well-defined workflow process to ensure migration runs smoothly and to deadline. Often businesses lack an understanding of how network changes impact application business continuity and are unable to avoid human error in application and service migrations. Business need to improve visibility and control with workflow process automation, including real-time alerts about network changes that impact business continuity, and offer full automation for application and service migration.


3. Ensuring systems are secure and compliant
The complexity of today’s organisational systems and networks means any changes to system and application connectivity now require myriad configuration changes to firewalls and security products. Many businesses try to manage the process manually which is not feasible, particularly during a time-critical migration where you’re running two platforms in parallel. Businesses need to manage security and compliance policies centrally, with real-time alerts when there are any violations, and have the ability to pinpoint and automate any required configuration changes to firewalls and security systems.


Migrations are on the up as more companies seek to take advantage of private and public cloud platforms, consolidate data centres following mergers and acquisitions, or modernise aging infrastructures to improve efficiency and agility.


A migration project can be one of the most risky and complex undertakings an enterprise faces. Gartner notes that seven out of ten of data centre migrations will incur significant delays or unplanned downtime. In addition, there’s a high risk that moving to a new platform will inadvertently introduce security holes or break compliance requirements.


The problem is compounded by the fact so few companies today have had hands-on experience of these challenges. The last major wave of migration was from mainframes to client/server in the 1990s, and the people who oversaw that transition have now largely retired or moved on.


In a new white paper, Tame the Network and Security Challenges of a Data Centre Migration, Tufin aims to close this gap in organisations’ knowledge by laying out how to plan and execute a smooth, secure migration with the help of the Tufin Orchestration Suite, the company’s market-leading solution for security and policy orchestration and automation.


Reuven Harrison, CTO and co-founder, Tufin said: “Data centre migrations have become a complex web of changes where many network owners are failing to connect the dots of where application and services are talking to each other. Whether it’s a physical or cloud migration, unless businesses take steps to get to grips with their network topology and centralise control of security and compliance, they risk downtime or service delays which will impact business performance.”

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