Retrouvez dans cette session, 100 % démonstrations : o Rappel des nouveautés SCCM 2012 o Pourquoi cibler des utilisateurs et non plus des machines o Présentation du nouveau modèle applicatif o Comment SCCM 2012 peut vous aider à replacer l’utilisateur au centre des préoccupations ? o Comment migrer du modele app de SCCM 2007 vers celui de 2012 ? o Notion de Applications Store dans SCCM 2012 : portail applicatif.
2. System Center
Configuration Manager
2012 en démonstration
(CLI203)
8 février 2012
Yann Seyroles - Microsoft
Jean-Sébastien Duchêne – MVP ConfigMgr
Hervé Thibault – MVP ConfigMgr
3. System Center 2012 – Vue d’ensemble
Configurer
App Controller Orchestrator
Deployer
Virtual Machine Manager
Modèle Fourniture et
Operations Manager
de Automatisation
Self Service du Service Configuration
Service Manager
DC
Data Protection Admin
MOA
Manager
Service Manager Service Manager
Superviser
Administrer
Gestion des Applications Fourniture et automatisation du Service Gestion de l’Infrastructure
6. Les contacts utiles…
Les adresses mails
Speakers:
Yann.seyroles@microsoft.com
Jean-sebastien.duchene@windowsmanagement.fr
Herve.thibault@windowsmanagement.fr
Chef de Produit: Jean-Philippe Dupuich
jean-philippe.dupuich@microsoft.com
Site System Center France
Le web…
http://www.microsoft.com/systemcenter
Site de la communauté d’utilisateurs System
Center
http://www.windowsmanagement.fr
7. Pour aller plus loin…
Evaluez System Center 2012 : téléchargez !
http://technet.microsoft.com/fr-
fr/evalcenter/hh505660.aspx
Formez-vous gratuitement en ligne avec MVA
http://www.microsoftvirtualacademy.com/Home.aspx
Assistez aux IT CAMPS (formations avec
laboratoire)
http://technet.microsoft.com/fr-fr/itcamps
Inscrivez-vous au Microsoft Management Summit
(MMS)
http://www.mms-2012.com/
Rendez-vous le 9 mai 2012 pour le Best of MMS
http://www.microsoft.fr/systemcenter
Notes de l'éditeur
SLIDE d’INTRODUCTION A PASSER JUSTE AVANT VOTRE INTERVENTIONNB : il y a le composantEndPoint Protection en plus des 7 affichéssurce slideSo let’s take a deeper look at how IT as a Service and the conversation between App Owner and Datacenter Admin work. Goal: Frame how System Center 2012 enables delivering IT as a Service between the App Owner and DC Admin personas that we defined. Talking Points If we think about the two personas we just discussed, let’s discuss the capabilities required to deliver IT as a service using a hybrid computing model. <click> First, you need a “simple” self-service experience to enable your application owners to specify their requirements. For example, let’s suppose they want to provision a SharePoint service with the following specs: 3 tier .NET architectureHas a set of configuration and deployment parameters to conform with (e.g. perf thresholds, scale out rules, update domains)Needs 99.95% availability SLAAdheres to compliance/security controls around SOX/HIPAA Need on-demand reporting on key availability metrics that track against SLA<click> Next, you need a way to understand the topology and architecture of the application service in question. An application deployed in on an abstracted, or cloud computing model is called a “service”. This would necessitate a “service model” that accurately binds the application’s architecture to the underlying resources where it will be hosted. The “service model” would be comprised of: Service definition information, deployed as “roles”. Roles are like DLLs, i.e. a collection of code with an entry point that runs in its own virtual machineFront end: e.g. load-balanced stateless web serversMiddle worker tier: e.g. order processing, encodingBackend storage: e.g. SQL tables or filesService Configuration informationUpdate domainsAvailability domains Scale out rules<click> You will need a set of process automation capabilities to break down this application provisioning request into the enterprise change requests that need to be implemented. This could include setting up the underlying infra and then a set of app configuration/release requests that need to be tracked (and ideally implemented with orchestrated automation)<click> Next you need a set of provisioning tools that actually configure and deploy the infra and application layers.<click> the underlying datacenter resources could be physical, virtual, private or public cloud as per the requirements dictated by the application’s service model <click> once the underlying infrastructure and application service are deployed, they would immediately need to be “discovered” and monitored for reporting and health tracking<click> There you see how the System Center 2012 components offer these life cycle management capabilities in combination to help you deliver hybrid IT as a Service as per your organization’s requirements: App Controller would offer that self-service experience that allows your application owners manage their apps across private and public environments. Service Manager offers the standardized self-service catalog that defines “templates” for your applications and infrastructure. App Controller, Virtual Machine Manager, Service Manager and Operations Manager work together to maintain the service model through the application service life cycleOrchestrator and Service Manager offer orchestrated automation for the process workflows required to drive your provisioning and monitoring toolsVirtual Machine Manager and Configuration manager can provision physical, virtual and cloud environmentsOperations Manager (AVIcode capabilities will be built into Operations Manager) monitors your application services end to end and offers deep app insight to help you deliver predictable SLAYour datacenter resources could be deployed anywhere from physical boxes to virtual to private to public with Windows Server/ Hyper-V and Windows Azure However, to get to this agile self-service end-state, you will have to start with abstracting your infrastructure and allocating it appropriately so that your business units can deploy and manage their applications on top. Transition: So, how does System Center 2012 get you to this point where you can deliver IT as a Service?Talking points:If we think about all the processes involved in delivering IT as a service, they can really be categorized into three buckets: Application Management: Deploying and operating your business applications Service Delivery & Automation: Standardizing and automating service and resource provisioning, managing change and access controls, etc.Infrastructure management: Deploying and operating all the underlying infrastructure on which your business applications and services run.