Today,
at AWS re:Invent, Amazon Web Services, Inc. (AWS), announced AWS Cloud WAN, a managed wide area
network (WAN) service that makes it faster and easier for enterprises to
build, manage, and monitor a unified global network that seamlessly
connects cloud and on-premises environments. AWS Cloud WAN provides a
central dashboard that enterprises can use to connect their on-premises
branch offices, data centers, and Amazon Virtual Private Clouds (Amazon
VPCs) across the AWS global network in just a few clicks. With AWS Cloud
WAN, enterprises can get a complete view of their global network and
use simple network policies to centrally configure and automate network
management and security tasks. AWS Cloud WAN enables enterprises to use
the AWS global network to provide a single unified network, which allows
them to improve network health, performance, and security. To learn
more about AWS Cloud WAN, visit aws.amazon.com/cloud-wan.
Many
enterprises today run their operations across multiple environments,
including on-premises data centers, branch offices, and AWS. To connect
these environments together, customers build and manage their own global
networks, while also leveraging networking, security, and internet
services from multiple third-party providers. For connectivity between
cloud environments, customers use AWS networking services like Amazon
VPC to easily build a logically isolated virtual network on AWS, and AWS
Transit Gateway to easily interconnect multiple VPCs. For connectivity
between cloud and on-premises environments, customers use AWS Direct
Connect to easily create a private connection between AWS and their data
centers, or create a secure AWS virtual private network (VPN)
connection. However, for connectivity between on-premises data centers
and branch offices, customers must invest considerable time and money to
build their own physical network or build a software-defined overlay
network from third-party providers. All of these networks take a
different approach to connectivity, security, monitoring, and managing
performance, which results in an intricate patchwork of individual
networks that is complicated to configure, secure, and manage. As a
result of these burdens, networking teams struggle with managing an
expanding mix of network technologies that are required to securely
build, scale, and operate a global network.
AWS
Cloud WAN is a managed WAN service that connects on-premises data
centers, branch offices, and cloud resources to simplify operating a
global network. With AWS Cloud WAN, enterprises can use a central
dashboard and network policies to build, manage, and monitor a global
network that spans multiple locations and networks-eliminating the need
to configure and manage different networks individually using different
technologies. Network teams can use simple network policies to specify
the Amazon VPCs and on-premises locations they want to connect through
AWS VPN, AWS Direct Connect, AWS Transit Gateway, and third-party
software-defined WAN (SD-WAN) products, and AWS Cloud WAN generates a
complete view of the network to monitor network health, security, and
performance. Teams can also use network policies to automate routine
network-management tasks like adding new sites or branch locations,
isolating traffic between sensitive applications or locations,
segmenting groups of networks to make it easier to manage network
isolation between AWS and on-premises environments, or enabling
specialized network or security services. For example, customers can
increase their security posture by creating a policy that ensures that
any network traffic from their branch locations must be routed through a
network firewall before reaching their cloud resources. AWS Cloud WAN
integrates with major SD-WAN and network appliance providers-including
Aruba (a Hewlett Packard Enterprise company), Cisco Systems, Palo Alto
Networks, and VMware-allowing customers to use and manage products and
services from these providers. Enterprises can now use AWS Cloud WAN to
simplify the way they build, manage, and monitor their networks with a
central control plane.
"We
hear from customers that they are tired of the complexity of managing
multiple networks with different connectivity, security, and monitoring
requirements using multiple third-party products and services," said
David Brown, Vice President of Amazon EC2 at AWS. "With AWS Cloud WAN,
customers can simplify how they manage a WAN by using a central
dashboard to unify the multiple networks they manage today, implement
network policies for performance and security, easily add locations, and
automate advanced network settings. AWS Cloud WAN removes the
difficulty of stitching together and managing multiple third-party tools
so customers can now more easily keep their networks securely connected
and high performing."
To
get started, customers connect their on-premises environments to AWS
with the help of a telecommunications service provider. These
connections bridge the gap between the customer's data centers or
colocation facilities and the AWS network, extending their existing WAN
network to the cloud. Customers can then deploy a highly available
global network by selecting the AWS Regions closest to their on-premises
locations and then easily add or remove remote locations, data centers,
or Amazon VPCs to and from their global network with just a few clicks
in the AWS Cloud WAN console or using the AWS Cloud WAN application
programming interface (API). AWS Cloud WAN is available in preview today
in US East (N. Virginia), US West (N. California), Africa (Cape Town),
Asia Pacific (Mumbai), Asia Pacific (Singapore), Asia Pacific (Sydney),
Asia Pacific (Tokyo), Europe (Ireland), Europe (Frankfurt), and South
America (São Paulo) with availability in additional AWS Regions coming
soon.
Cisco
is the worldwide leader in technology that powers the Internet.
"Today's workforce demands more flexibility, meaning organizations must
ultimately rethink how they provide simple, secure connectivity to cloud
applications, no matter where the user is located," said JL Valente,
Vice President of Product Management, Enterprise Routing, and SD-WAN at
Cisco. "To help our customers not only meet the demands of a hybrid
workforce, but also provide true end-to-end connectivity and security,
Cisco has integrated Cisco SD-WAN with the AWS Cloud WAN service so
customers can use automation to interconnect their users, sites and
cloud workloads, reduce deployment time, and increase application
performance with AWS's global cloud network."
Deloitte
is one of the largest professional services firms in the world and a
leader in digital transformation strategy. Through a network of more
than 345,000 professionals, industry specialists, and an ecosystem of
alliances, Deloitte assists clients in turning complex business issues
into opportunities for growth. "In our work with clients' networking
challenges, Deloitte strives to streamline network configuration and
operation/support of large-scale cloud network environments," said
Richard Johnson, DC Managing Director at Deloitte. "AWS Cloud WAN
addresses network complexity, provides visibility, and offers
opportunity to become more operationally effective."
Swisscom
is Switzerland's leading telecom provider and one of its foremost IT
companies, serving customers that range from small-to-medium enterprises
to large international corporations that have operations in
Switzerland. "We are always looking for innovations that help us deliver
the network of the future to our customers, innovating ahead of their
needs," said Christoph Aeschlimann, CTIO at Swisscom. "We look to
services like AWS Cloud WAN as a powerful way to help our customers take
their business to the next level in agility, scalability, and
competitiveness."
Verizon
is one of the world's leading providers of technology and
communications services. "As a company that's been a global innovator in
SD-WAN since the inception of the technology with the first global
SD-WAN offering, we look forward to collaborating with AWS on this
service that will give enterprises a new tool set to manage their
unified global networks," said Srini Kalapala, Vice President of
Technology Development and Planning at Verizon.
VMware
is a leading innovator in enterprise software and cloud services for
all apps, enabling digital innovation with enterprise control. "AWS and
VMware continue to help mutual customers shift to distributed work,
extend environments to the edge, and optimize security and performance
of their business-critical apps," said Sanjay Uppal, Senior Vice
President and General Manager, Service Provider and Edge Business Unit
at VMware. "Enterprises don't want to just connect to AWS; they want
more controlled secure access and reliable connectivity to access apps
and data inside AWS. Combining VMware Secure Access Service Edge (SASE)
with AWS Cloud WAN enables enterprises to deliver a more optimized and
secure on-net experience for distributed environments. VMware SASE will
better assure last mile reliability, maintain network segmentation
end-to-end, and enable enterprise control and compliance."
Flutter
is a global leader in online sports betting and gaming, with over 14
million customers globally. "To keep up with rapid growth and demand for
real-time data, we built a global network with services from AWS that
seamlessly connects our group divisions around the world. We recently
went live and we have already seen significant improvements," said
Rupesh Kapadia, Head of Cloud, Operations & Workplace Technology at
Sportsbet, the Australian division of Flutter. "Onboarding a new
business to our legacy network would take months, however it now takes
about five days to connect a new division to the group. AWS Cloud WAN
will help us add new sites to our network even faster, whilst improving
the visibility, security posture, and speed to change ahead of business
expectations."