Once you decide to build a technology solution, you start following the latest technology trends and probably one of the first things you hear about is Cloud Service. Zillions of articles are written about Cloud service, its advantages and challenges, how to choose the best vendor and so on. But are you still confused about what the heck is SaaS, PaaS and IaaS? Well, you are not alone. There are some crucial differences but the choice gets difficult in case you are not aware of the nuances of these three models.
Here we try to address some fundamental questions related to these three options. The article below will guide you what each of these options mean, what are the salient features and which one to choose when.
Let me share a basic diagram demonstrating the difference between these. Don’t worry, if you find this overwhelming. A detailed explanation is to follow –
Consider that you have a server on-site with your Enterprise software services and its database. This incurred an initial investment in terms of IT infrastructure and a physical location, and there are gradually growing costs involving maintenance. To avoid these costs, enterprises turn towards Cloud Computing Service vendors that provide the same or advanced infrastructure as per your specifications on a rental basis.
Cloud is a platform that hosts a pool of computing resources over the Internet as a convenient, on-demand utility to be rented on a pay-as-you-go basis. Hence all Clouds are basically virtualized data centers made up of computation and storage resources.
The term Cloud computing services comprises all the services which are hosted over a Cloud. Hence Cloud Computing is the utilization of services such as storage, applications, and servers, over the cloud, on-demand and in a dynamically scalable fashion.
Most organizations go for Cloud services to reduce their investments in infrastructure costs, maintenance costs and ensuring the availability of resources round the clock. Cloud Computing is more efficient and cost-effective solution than traditional data centers.
Typically, cloud services have following characteristics -
SaaS is the most popular and known form of cloud service for consumers.
As part of SaaS the third-party vendor provides the organization with the entire stack to be procured on a pay-as-you-go basis. SaaS provides you the complete freedom to work on the procured software without worrying about how the infrastructure or even how the underlying software is maintained.
The popular vendors of SaaS are Microsoft 365, Zoho, Salesforce, SAP, Google G Suite and more.
PaaS is where coupled with the underlying hardware, the third-party vendor provides middleware, operating systems, and tools required to develop and test applications. This differs the procuring organization from the cost of maintaining, patching or any kind of capacity planning required for your underlying platform.
The common vendors providing PaaS are AWS, Salesforce.com, Microsoft Azure, Oracle Cloud, SAP and OpenShift among others.
Developers work on PaaS platform and concentrate on software application building without having to worry about software updates, operating systems, load balancing, storage, or other details related to infrastructure.
Built on top of virtualization technology – you can demand for resources as per your need and scale up/ down as per the requirement
When multiple developers are working on the development or when external parties are involved in the development process, PaaS is a great option to bring in the speed and flexibility to the development process
IaaS is where virtualized computing infrastructure is provisioned and managed for businesses by Cloud vendors. The IT resources that are offered in IaaS include storage, servers and networking utilities over the internet.
Major companies that provide IaaS are AWS, Rackspace Open Cloud, IBM Smart Cloud, Microsoft Azure and more.
Saas, PaaS or IaaS – each of these cloud models offer specific features and functionalities and it is critical that businesses make a prudent choice based on their specific requirements. There is always a learning curve but there are tremendous benefits of moving to these platforms.