The name of the base system (platform): | HPE Helion |
Developers: | Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) |
Last Release Date: | 2014/10/22 |
Technology: | IaaS - Infrastructure as service, Data processing centers - technologies for DPC |
HP Helion Continuity Service is a cloud service of recovery after catastrophic failures.
On October 22, 2014 the HP company announced improvement of a cloud service of recovery after catastrophic failures (disaster-recovery-as-a-service, DRaaS) HP Helion Continuity Service.
HP claims, the updated service allows to reduce data recovery terms by 90%, to reduce data loss by 95% and to save from 15 to 50% of monetary costs thanks to special model of quotations.
- Time of complete recovery (RTO) of IT structure and data of the customer - from one to four hours, from the saved recovery point (RPO), as a rule, from 1 to 15 minutes.
- Fast reservation of data and readiness - within two days after purchase of a service package.
HP Helion Continuity Service protects the tasks which are performed in a private cloud of the customer, in the traditional environment of a hosting or in the managed virtual private cloud of HP. In the previous option service supported physical and virtual Windows servers, clusters and servers under Linux. Now the choice became more — the cluster Red Hat Enterprise Linux option, Oracle Real Application Clusters technology and networks of storage are supported. There were possibilities of reservation of additional tanks of storage in recovery time and the order of the selected hypervisor for the applications requiring replication in real time[1].
For increase in level of readiness of DRaaS service in HP increased number of data processing centers from where it is provided. New DPCs opened in the USA to provide compliance to the law on fight against terrorism according to which the government can demand data of the company even if they are stored abroad.
HP represents Helion Continuity Services