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Inside Oracle’s cloud adoption journey
Oracle CIO Jae Evans outlines the company’s approach to migrating its own infrastructure and applications to cloud and what customers can learn from its cloud journey
Being the first to deploy Oracle cloud services across the company’s global operations, Jae Evans has had the front row seat to the latest capabilities that Oracle has built for its customers.
The first two years of her career as Oracle’s CIO was spent migrating a disparate set of infrastructure and applications acquired over time to the company’s second-generation Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI), which was developed from the ground-up with built in automation and security capabilities.
“Leveraging our own set of native tools within OCI, we were able to migrate our assets that were historically on-premises, with a bunch of infrastructure sprawl, to the cloud,” she told Computer Weekly on the sidelines of Oracle CloudWorld Tour in Singapore.
“But more importantly, we gained the velocity to provision workloads much faster than we were able to do on-premises, through automation and creating a reference architecture to move those workloads in a repeatable fashion,” she added.
Evans was not new to cloud migration when she joined Oracle in 2020, having been responsible for infrastructure engineering and operations at Walmart, where her team supported in-store infrastructure and e-commerce for the retail giant’s global operations.
That included building a private cloud that could scale with the size of Walmart and modernising legacy assets so that the retailer could continue to grow its bricks-and-mortar business and meet the demands of peak shopping seasons.
Migration strategy
With more than 1,000 applications under her charge at Oracle, Evans had her work cut out to rationalise which applications were still needed. Her team found that in some cases, three different applications had been created by various business units.
“We created a central repository of our assets and once we got a good sense of what was being used and how it was being used – some applications weren’t even used – we could get a level of transparency while we did the migration,” Evans said.
Her team also realised that a significant amount of infrastructure being provisioned was underutilised. So, by migrating its infrastructure to OCI in a ‘lift-and-improve’ approach, Oracle was able to reduce waste and achieve infrastructure efficiency that resulted in cost savings.
Evans said although a lot of lift-and-improve work was done, new containerised applications were also developed and deployed using OCI’s cloud-native tools. In some cases, applications such as a monolithic subscription management platform had to be broken down and rewritten as microservices to achieve the scale Oracle needed to make sure its customers were truly paying for the services they used. “That was a big rewrite, but we also optimised it for the cloud and continued to iterate from there,” Evans said.
At the same time, the use of managed services helped with tasks such as database tuning. “With autonomous database capabilities, we can do things like tuning, scaling, and repairing if you have an incident or service impacting your database, without having our database admins do those tasks anymore,” Evans said.
Underpinning Oracle’s cloud migration strategy was a reference architecture that outlined application tenancies, how applications interacted with each other, and security controls, alleviating the need to do bespoke reviews with application, security, operations and architecture teams.
To keep cloud costs in check, Evans said Oracle uses the Oracle Cloud Advisor to understand which workloads are being run, and what’s running in terms of compute, memory, storage and databases, so it can make decisions to manage costs.
For example, monitoring, logging and telemetry, while necessary to keep applications and services humming along, take up a lot of resources. “But at the same time, you don’t need to have all of that, and so we’ve compressed a lot of the tracking to only track things that you absolutely need to.”
Besides being Oracle’s CIO, Evans also oversees platform services for OCI, with her experience deploying OCI services translating into product improvements.
For example, while using Oracle’s generative AI (GenAI) services including pre-trained models to create an AI service desk that could better address the surge in password-reset requests at the start of each year, Evans’ team encountered performance issues which they worked with Oracle’s GenAI product team to fix.
Oracle has also developed fleet management tools to gain better visibility over cloud resources used across its business units, enabling it to provision and manage workloads in an automated and centralised way. “We’ve created the tools for ourselves, but now we're in the process of making them available as a service to our customers,” she said.
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