How 1hao Store Uses Hybrid Cloud to Balance Cost and Performance
This article explains how an e‑commerce platform leverages a hybrid cloud architecture to handle massive traffic spikes from marketing events while optimizing costs, and outlines six key considerations for successful implementation.
Hybrid Cloud in E‑commerce: 1hao Store Case
Hybrid cloud combines public and private cloud resources, offering a flexible solution that balances cost savings with security and performance. Enterprises can keep sensitive data on private clouds while tapping public cloud compute power for peak loads.
Marketing Peaks and Traffic Spikes
1hao Store’s creative marketing campaigns generate traffic surges many times higher than normal, creating a need for rapid scaling.
Provisioning hundreds of servers solely for occasional events leads to low utilization and high costs, so the store adopts public‑cloud servers to absorb the spikes.
Hybrid Cloud Management Workflow
The store’s hybrid cloud platform follows these steps:
Server Validation : Verify IP, memory, disk, etc., then transfer configuration templates and images to public‑cloud machines.
Server Authorization : Grant access to the public‑cloud machines so they can reach private‑cloud network resources.
Public‑Cloud Initialization : Use the transferred templates to configure the machines for production.
Deployment and Reclamation : Deploy applications automatically, then reclaim resources and settle costs after the event.
Management Platform Flow : Integrate private and public clouds to provide unified services.
Six Key Considerations for Hybrid Cloud Adoption
Mature Private‑Cloud Platform : A robust private cloud with automated operations and monitoring is a prerequisite.
Bandwidth and Latency : Critical e‑commerce transactions require latency under 10 ms; core transaction services should stay on private cloud, while other workloads can use hybrid resources.
I/O Performance : Choose public‑cloud providers with high‑performance SSD storage for database workloads.
API Support : Rich private‑cloud APIs simplify integration, resource provisioning, and precise cost accounting.
Stability : Implement flexible traffic‑shaping and rapid failover mechanisms (seconds to minutes) between clouds; monitor health and use GSLB for automatic switching.
Security : Enforce strict auditing and isolation for public‑cloud machines accessing the private data center; avoid storing sensitive data in the public cloud.
Conclusion
Integrating technology and business through a well‑designed hybrid cloud can drive growth, improve cost efficiency, and maintain high availability for e‑commerce platforms.
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