Oracle today extended its alliance with Microsoft to include a managed service that makes it simpler for IT organizations to embrace hybrid cloud computing. Oracle Database Service for Microsoft Azure integrates Windows applications with Oracle databases running on Oracle Cloud Infrastructure.
Leo Leung, vice president of products and strategy for Oracle, said the managed service is an extension of an existing capability that was rolled out in 2019. However, many IT organizations found it too difficult to provision hybrid cloud computing environments themselves. The managed service makes it easier to access Oracle databases across a high-speed network spanning 11 global regions, Leung said.
There is no charge for the Oracle Database Service for Microsoft Azure, the Oracle Interconnect for Microsoft Azure, data egress or ingress when moving data between OCI and Azure, said Leung. Organizations will pay only for the other Azure or Oracle services they consume.
DevOps teams have often spent significant amounts of time trying to integrate diverse cloud computing environments. Now, with just a few clicks, Oracle is making it possible to connect Azure subscriptions to OCI. The service automatically configures OCI and Azure environments, federates Azure Active Directory identities and enables monitoring with Azure Application Insights.
Oracle and Microsoft, of course, are locked in a fierce database contest as Microsoft looks to drive adoption of SQL Server as an alternative to the Oracle relational database. However, there are many organizations that today run Oracle databases on Windows servers in on-premises IT environments. Oracle is looking to make it easier to migrate those environments to the cloud with minimal disruption, noted Leung.
Theoretically, organizations are embracing multi-cloud computing to ensure they don’t find themselves locked into a single provider. The challenge is that each cloud computing environment has its own set of management tools that need to be mastered. As organizations add additional clouds, the actual total cost of IT rises as more specialists are brought on board to manage those environments. Oracle’s approach addresses that issue by enabling IT teams to manage Oracle databases via a single pane of glass that resides on the Azure cloud, said Leung.
Oracle has been trying to gain market share in the cloud by reducing the total cost of cloud services. A free managed service for integrating Azure cloud with OCI also reduces the incentive any existing Oracle customer might have to replace Oracle databases as they migrate to the cloud.
It’s not clear how far the Oracle service will advance hybrid and multi-cloud computing, but it does set a new benchmark for what IT organizations should expect. The days when cloud service providers largely ignored each other are coming to an end. In this day and age, IT teams should not have to devote resources to integrating low-level APIs simply because cloud service providers don’t want to acknowledge the fact that application workloads are routinely deployed on multiple clouds.