Abstract
Since Microsoft Azure announced Single Instance SLA for
Azure Virtual Machine, people are getting confused if availability sets with
multiple VMs are required or no?
This post is to address various queries I received
regarding Azure VM availability and SLA.
Disclaimer:
All below views are personal. In no way, it represents the company I work for.
What is SLA?
SLA stands for Service Level agreement. It is a contract
between service provider(here, Microsoft Azure) and end user(anyone, any
organization who user Microsoft Azure services); that defines the level of service expected from the
service provider.
If expected level of service is not provided and there
is loss of business for end user then end user may claim for financial recovery
with valid reasons, proofs, evidences etc. If evidences are valid and
justified, then it will be an obligation for service provider to approve the
claim and make payments.
Depending on the SLA provided, availability can be
identified. Many online websites tools available for knowing what uptime of
service you get based on SLA percentage. For example, if SLA offered as 99.90%
means below can be approximate time periods of potential downtime/
unavailability of the service –
- Daily: 1m 26.4s
- Weekly: 10m
4.8s
- Monthly: 43m
49.7s
- Yearly:
8h 45m 57.0s
SLA percentage at 99.9% and above are general and
industry accepted standards. Reference link used for calculation is here.
Recommendation for 99.95% availability for Azure VM – Availability sets
If you want to achieve 99.95% SLA for Azure VM
deployment you should have at-least 2 instances of Azure VM running in
Availability set.
P.S. Azure VMs with availability sets can be provisioned
from the portal.
Irrespective of type of storage disk used for Azure VMs,
SLA 99.95% is valid as long as you are running 2 instances in availability
sets. This means if I want high availability for my crucial workloads under
Azure VM then I should be running at least 2 VMs on azure in availability sets.
2 VMs with no availability sets means no SLA also. 😊
What is Azure VM - Single Instance SLA?
There were very important specific demand from
customer –
-
“We want to run applications on azure that
are not designed to run in multiple VMs. So how do we ensure reliability for
such applications running on single Azure VM?”
-
“The application I am running on premises
today is not designed for scale out. Also scale and management of the
application is too expensive and cumbersome for me. What alternatives I have to
move such a application to Azure immediately?”
The answer is Azure VM Single Instance SLA.
If you run single instance of Azure VM with premium disk or ultra you will get 99.9% SLA.
Does Azure offer single instance SLA for Standard HDD and Standard SSD?
Does Single Instance SLA means High Availability?
No. A simple concept behind high availability is to have
redundancy. With single instance there is no redundancy hence no high
availability. But when I say no high availability does not mean that VM and
applications hosted may face downtime anytime. Your VM will be up 99.9% time in
its running lifetime. When Microsoft Azure plans to have maintenance, they will
send you notification at-least 5 days before. So you can plan the downtime
alternatives with applications running with single instance on Azure VM.
You want to go beyond 99.9% SLA, implement Availability
sets and get 99.95% SLA. You want auto-scaling, go for VM Scale Sets. You want
to go for 99.999 and so on availability; go for DR, backup strategy.
Summary
1. Today
Microsoft Azure is the only cloud who provides Single Instance SLA.
2. Single
instance SLA is guaranteed only when VM is running with all disks as Premium.
3. Single
instance SLA does not mean you get High availability for applications hosted in
VM.
4. To
get High availability, run more than 1 VMs. [This doubles the cost, but there
is a way to reduce the cost and still achieve HA; Of-course that is another
blog on another day 😊].
5. Most
important – don’t commit to customer that “Single instance SLA means your
application will never be down and it provides inbuilt HA”. 😐
6. To
know more about VM SLA refer - https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/support/legal/sla/virtual-machines/v1_3/
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