Matching INSPIRE Quality of Service Requirements with Hybrid Clouds

A lot of effort has been invested in Spatial Data Infrastructures (SDIs) during the last decade regarding interoperable standards for services and data. But still the scalability and performance of SDI services is reported to be crucial especially if they are accessed concurrently by a high number of users. Furthermore, laws and provisions such as the INSPIRE directive specify challenging requirements regarding the performance, availability and scalability of SDI services. This article presents a Hybrid Cloud architecture for matching INSPIRE-related Quality of Service (QoS) requirements, without investing in rarely used hardware in advance, by occupying external third-party resources on a pay-as-you-go basis. The presented Hybrid Cloud is a composition of a local IT-infrastructure (Private Cloud) and the computational resources of third-party vendors (Public Cloud). The local infrastructure is laid out to handle the average main load of a service and in lasting peak times additional resources of external providers are allocated and integrated on demand into the local infrastructure to provide sufficient service quality automatically. A proof-of-concept implementation of the proposed Hybrid Cloud approach is evaluated and benchmarked with respect to INSPIRE-related QoS requirements.