Difference between revisions of "Application Modernization"
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L’étape de la découverte est terminée à ce stade-ci. L’analyse et la planification réalisées à cette étape seront présentées au CEAI GC dans le cadre de la demande d’approbation de la libération de fonds pour la mise en œuvre. | L’étape de la découverte est terminée à ce stade-ci. L’analyse et la planification réalisées à cette étape seront présentées au CEAI GC dans le cadre de la demande d’approbation de la libération de fonds pour la mise en œuvre. | ||
− | Le modèle générique permettant la présentation de votre analyse des découvertes et de votre approbation de financement pour la mise en œuvre est accessible [|ici]. | + | |
+ | Le modèle générique permettant la présentation de votre analyse des découvertes et de votre approbation de financement pour la mise en œuvre est accessible [[gccollab.ca/file/view/3399890/enfrgu00e9nu00e9rique-mod-app-et-mct-point-de-contru00f4le-1-du00e9couvertepptx|ici]]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Dans le cadre du CEAI GC, un dirigeant principal de l’information (DPI) expliquera la stratégie de migration et les choix ciblés. Il expliquera, entre autres, dans quelle mesure ces choix respectent l’exigence de la politique de l’informatique en nuage d’abord (exigence 6.4.2) et l’exigence 6.1.1 de la Directive. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Si le CEAI GC donne son approbation, on demandera également, le cas échéant, l’approbation du DPI du GC. Un protocole d’entente sera conclu entre le dirigeant principal de l’information (DPI) du GC et l’administrateur général du ministère ayant présenté la demande. Le modèle générique du PE est accessible ici (insérez le modèle). | ||
+ | <!-- END OF DISCOVERY --> | ||
+ | <!-- EXECUTION --> | ||
+ | === ''Mise en œuvre'' === | ||
+ | |||
+ | Une fois que l’on a atteint les priorités, on en avise les ministères partenaires et on fournit la trousse de départ sur la modernisation des applications, le guide sur la modernisation des applications et le document de FAQ. Cette trousse comporte le modèle du CEAI GC, le modèle d’estimation des coûts associés à la modernisation des applications (utilisé pour relever les exigences en matière de financement), le tableau de bord Vue du ministère et centre de données, le tableau de bord sur l’examen des risques liés aux applications et le modèle d’analyse de rentabilisation. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Les ministères partenaires reçoivent de l’aide et du soutien tout au long de la mobilisation. Les ministères partenaires sont appuyés par la gouvernance (groupe de travail sur la MCT, CEAI GC, SMA CPPI et SM CPPI), qui rend accessible le financement pour lancer l’étape des découvertes. Un protocole d’entente sera conclu entre le dirigeant principal de l’information (DPI) du gouvernement du Canada (GC) et l’administrateur général du ministère afin d’assurer le financement. | ||
+ | <!-- END OF EXECUTION --> | ||
+ | <!-- Leçons apprises --> | ||
+ | == '''Leçons apprises''' == | ||
+ | <b>Il est difficile d’apporter des changements.</b> L’informatique en nuage nécessite un profond changement de culture au sein de l’organisation, tout particulièrement dans la TI, étant donné qu’il exige la transformation radicale de certains rôles. Ne sous-estimez pas la peur du changement que peuvent avoir certaines personnes. La gestion des changements organisationnels doit être placée à l’avant-plan. | ||
+ | |||
+ | <b>Important soutien exigé de l’administrateur général et tous les niveaux des cadres supérieurs.</b> En raison de l’ampleur des changements exigés et de la complexité sous-jacente, la table de la haute direction DOIT démontrer un leadership fort et cohérent afin d’assurer la réussite. | ||
+ | |||
+ | <b>L’informatique en nuage est une aventure plutôt qu’une destination.</b> Il s’agit d’un processus très complexe qui prendra plus de temps que vous ne le croyez. Commencez dès maintenant, avant même d’avoir tous les renseignements nécessaires. CELA ÉTANT DIT, assurez-vous de commencer en vous fixant des objectifs simples et modestes ne pouvant causer que de faibles préjudices lorsque vous échouerez. Soyez-en assuré, vous devrez effectivement composer avec certains échecs. Apprenez à marcher avant d’essayer de courir. L’adoption complète de l’informatique en nuage vous prendra des années. | ||
+ | |||
+ | <b>Établissez des partenariats avec les autres.</b> Le fait d’avoir une équipe de projets intégrée avec SPC constitue un important facteur de succès. Mettez à profit l’expertise de l’industrie et des personnes qui sont passées par là avant vous. Important soutien exigé de l’administrateur général et tous les niveaux des cadres supérieurs. | ||
+ | |||
+ | <b>Petit bassin de personnes-ressources qui possèdent l’expertise nécessaire.</b> Les personnes-ressources sont régulièrement ciblées par les autres ministères et les acteurs du secteur privé. La capacité d’attirer, et de maintenir en poste, les meilleurs talents est essentielle et pose énormément de défis dans le contexte de la fonction publique. | ||
+ | |||
+ | <b>Les produits pourraient ne pas fonctionner tel qu’annoncé.</b> Même si les produits sont offerts en disponibilité générale et ont été testés sur le marché libre, il est possible qu’ils ne fonctionnent pas nécessairement de la façon prévue. Il pourrait être nécessaire d’effectuer un grand nombre d’échanges avec le fournisseur (dans le cas présent MS) afin d’obtenir les fonctionnalités prévues, nous vous recommandons par conséquent de prévoir du temps pour les imprévus dans le cadre de ce type de projets. | ||
+ | |||
+ | <b>Exprimez vos préoccupations sans tarder.</b> Vous devez surveiller très attentivement vos coûts et savoir quels niveaux ils devraient atteindre. Plus important encore, vous devez aviser sans tarder le fournisseur de vos préoccupations pour lui permettre de les examiner et d’apporter les ajustements nécessaires, par exemple au moyen des analyses de journaux. | ||
+ | |||
+ | <b>Soyez informe comme l’eau.</b> Bien que vous deviez suivre une vision et un objectif uniques, il vous est essentiel d’être aussi informe que l’eau. Le paysage du service informatique en nuage est en constante évolution. Il est bien fini le temps du « vous le configurez soyez donc prêt à vous adapter le cas échéant, par exemple, Exploration, fermeture du centre de données de la promenade de l’Aéroport (CDPA), bureau, etc. | ||
</multilang> | </multilang> |
Revision as of 15:15, 6 December 2019
Note: We are continuously improving this site. As the initiative attracts more attention, we are trying to publish the information we have as we have it. A French version will follow shortly.
Templates and discussions related to Application Modernization can be found in the GCCollab Core Technologies group. It is strongly recommended you join that group to watch for updates.
Overview[edit | edit source]
This handbook is meant to help departments navigate the Application Modernization Investment Framework; the process for:
- Prioritizing at-risk technologies
- Engaging with partner departments
- Performing an analysis of departmental application portfolios
- Planning for addressing the at-risk technologies through modernization
- Governance gating for endorsing modernization/migration plan and making the associated funds available
- Ongoing monitoring of status
This handbook focuses on the decisions departments must make and how they are captured. It is not meant to provide a deep analysis of different technical decisions or architectural strategies a department can use to modernize, save for those captured in policy instruments.
The Investment Frame work consists of two gates:
Gate 1: a scope of at-risk technologies has been identified and approved by governance for modernization or decommissioning
Gate 2: a department's plan for modernization is ready to be endorsed by GC EARB thus authorizing the release of Application Modernization funds.
The Investment Framework also consists of four phases:
Prioritization: priorities for modernizing at-risk technologies are selected and endorsed by governance.
Engagement: notify impacted departments, distribute templates to capture technical details, modernization/migration strategies, costing details and reporting dashboard.
Discovery: departments analyze their application portfolios to determine their strategies for modernizing at-risk technologies including a plan and cost estimates.
Execution: departments work with their partners to execute the modernization strategies identified during the discovery phase.
The image below provides a pictorial view of a department's journey through the Investment Framework, or can also be found here in downloadable document form.
Background[edit | edit source]
Application Modernization is one of four pillars of the Workload Migration & Cloud Enablement (WLM&CE) initiative. A brief Frequently Asked Questions document can be found here.
From Budget 2018:
"$110 million over six years, starting in 2018–19, to be accessed by Shared Services Canada’s partner departments and agencies to help them migrate their applications from older data centres into more secure modern data centres or cloud solutions."
Prioritization[edit | edit source]
Priorities for investment from the Application Modernization and Workload Migration funds are based upon identifying high business value applications that are impacted by at-risk technologies. These at risk technologies can include, amongst other things, end of life software, end of life infrastructure, outdated architectures, to be decommissioned facilities such as data centres, etc…
To stabilize the IT landscape and ensure continuity of services to Canadians, TBS and SSC are working in collaboration with GC departments that demonstrate a readiness to modernize applications and migrate them to end state hosting platforms (cloud or enterprise data centres).
Departments may identify applications of high business value that are impacted by technology risks as a priority investment. If endorsed by governance, those priorities will be eligible for access to Application Modernization funds and support from the Workload Migration program.
To facilitate the prioritization process, a GCEARB Gate1 (Prioritization) template has been provided for departments to complete. This template, once completed, can be brought forward to your Departmental Architecture Review Board before being brought forward to request endorsement by governance (WLM Working group, GC EARB, ADM CEPP, and DM CEPP). The request for endorsement is a department’s opportunity to make a strong business case for investment to address at-risk technologies.
The endorsement of priority at-risk technologies must be supported by the departments’ Application Portfolio Management (APM) data, readiness to proceed with the application modernization framework (described on this page), and the strategy that will be used to modernize (rehost, replatform, refactor, replace and to which hosting platform; data centre or cloud services)
In 2018, the following data centre facilities were identified as at-risk technologies to be decommissioned and the applications to be migrated or modernized to a new data centre or cloud services.
The first wave of workload migration projects began in 2018:
- Tunney’ Pasture DC (Statistics Canada)
- Dorval DC (Environment and Climate Change Canada)
- Aviation Parkway DC (22 partner department tenants)
- St. Laurent DC (Canada Revenue Agency and Canada Border Services Agency)
- Booth Street DC (Natural Resources Canada)
- Goldenrod DC (Department of National Defence)
(insert approved wave 2 list of priorities Oct. 10)
Governance[edit | edit source]
Engagement[edit | edit source]
Once priorities are reached and the impacted partner departments are notified, the Application Modernization starter kit package, along with application modernization handbook and FAQ documents are provided. This package contains GC EARB Gate 1 (Prioritization) template, App Mod Cost estimates template (used to identify funding requirements), Departmental & Data Centre View dashboard, Application Risk Review dashboard, and Business case template. Partner departments are provided guidance/assistance throughout the engagement journey.
Partner Departments are endorsed by governance (WLM Working group, GC EARB, ADM CEPP, and DM CEPP) and funding becomes available to initiate the discovery phase. A Memorandum of Understanding between the Government of Canada’s Chief Information Officer (GC CIO) and the Deputy Head of a department will be agreed upon by both parties to secure the funding.
Discovery[edit | edit source]
Application Portfolio Analysis[edit | edit source]
The next three steps are an opportunity for your departments to assess its portfolio of applications and document your decisions as to how you will reduce, sustain, and modernize that portfolio.
Determine Modernization Vision for the Organization[edit | edit source]
By the end of this step, you should have discussed with leadership how far you want to take your modernization journey. This will be the vision for your organization. Those who will be performing the subsequent portfolio analysis steps should understand that vision.
This is an opportunity to determine the direction for the organization; is it to largely sustain current operations and culture, or does the organization desire to modernize and be more transformative. Perhaps your organization has already begun a modernization journey. In today's IT environment cloud technologies combined with DevOps methods are having a large impact on how IT is delivered. Amongst the goals of these technologies and methods is to decrease lead time and time to market; in summary
- deliver IT faster
- Increase reliability
- Increase security
- Increase quality
This guide does not instruct an organization how to undertake its modernization journey, but instead is meant to be a catalyst for establishing the vision. These changes can be wide sweeping impacting roles, responsibilities, and culture. They are not undertaken in a year, but instead must be seen as a journey of maturity and continuous improvement.
While some organizations have started this journey years ago and are ready to go "all in" on cloud and the workforce are DevOps practitioners, others have not begun the journey.
For those who have not yet begun a modernization journey the choice may be take this opportunity to start that journey. For others, they may decide to simply sustain operations as-is.
A simple visual for plotting you cloud adoption maturity can be found here. Most organizations start small with a few low risk applications. A team of willing and keen developers from within your existing workforce would lead an initative to migrate those low risk workloads to the cloud. From these experiences they would use their learnings to train others to do the same. As the number of workloads grow, the need for more sophisticated methods such as automation and DevOps will need to be applied. This will facilitate scaling without impacting agility. Existing governance and roles will also need to evolve. An organization should review the [insert roles and reap document here] to ensure your organization is ready to undertake the required roles to support cloud services.
A simple scorecard has been devised to assess low risk workloads for cloud migration. This scorecard is meant to provide you a short list from which to further decide where to start. Any application can be migrated to the cloud with enough time and effort. The scorecard is meant to identify low risk and low effort migrations.
For organizations that desire to forego modernization opportunities, the decision to rehost the entire application portfolio to a new data centre provides that opportunity.
Determine Rationalization and Retirement Opportunities[edit | edit source]
By the end of this step you will have assessed your portfolio and infrastructure for rationalization and retirement opportunities.
Obsolete Repositories[edit | edit source]
There are GC applications – content management systems / web-database systems - that are no longer actively used but maintained because they may contain information that might be required in the future e.g. to respond to an ATIP request.
- Departments should have an active Information Management (IM) function that can verify the actual data retention requirements applicable to a specific application.
- Departments should recognize the cost of unnecessary data retention and actively dispose of data that has been deemed unnecessary. Unnecessary data is both a cost and a liability.
Obsolete Applications[edit | edit source]
Your application portfolio rates the business value of applications. Review low business value applications. Assess whether these applications remain needed:
- Use access/update logs to identify applications that have received few updates in the past two years.
- Identify the most recent users and inquire as to the business value of the application.
Document Migration Strategy and Targets[edit | edit source]
By the end of this step you will have analyzed your portfolio of applications, updated key data in APM, chose the migrations strategy for each application ( one of the 5 Rs ), and the target for each application ( cloud or EDC ).
During the Determine Modernization Vision for the Organization step you would have determine how far your organization wants to take its modernization journey. Part of that step was the Cloud Fit Scorecard. You should have already narrowed the target options for each application.
Choose the Appropriate Migration Strategy[edit | edit source]
For each application you need to determine you migration strategy (aka the 5Rs).
Strategy | Alternative Name | Full Description | Data Centre | Cloud |
---|---|---|---|---|
Retire | Decomission | Retire, decommission, sunset application. Eliminate it from the portfolio. | ||
Rehost | Lift and shift | Redeploy applications to a different hardware environment and change the application’s infrastructure configuration. Also called Lift-and-shift. Move the solution as is, or with minor changes, to a new hosting environment (small investment of resources). | X | X |
Replatform | Lift, shift, and tinker | Change OS / Middleware. Requiring some level of application change (medium investment of resources to change). | X1 | X |
Refactor | Re-architect | Application will be redesigned. Sections of the application will be re-written for improvement/optimization purposes (medium to large investment of resources to change). | X | |
Replace | Repurchase | Replace application's functionality by a new solution acquired or developed by department (medium to large investment of resources). The application will be decommissioned once replaced. | X |
1Appropriate when addressing end of life OSes
Rehost (lift and shift)[edit | edit source]
With a rehost migration strategy, the application undergoes no changes and is migrated as-is to a new data centre or cloud. This is the simplest and least effort migration strategy.
For workloads migrating to cloud, it is strongly advised that, at the very least, the resources (network, compute, storage) be optimized and reduced to the smallest size possible. Additionally using reserved instances for production workloads and turning off unused servers during off-hours will help ensure a lower monthly bill from your cloud provider.
Replatform (lift, shift, and tinker)[edit | edit source]
With a replatform strategy, the application undergoes minor changes as it is migrated to a new data centre or cloud. Replatforming strategies may include, but as not limited to:
Addressing end of life (EOL) software such as those deprecated by IT Policy Implementation Notice ITPINs
Move to Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS). For commoditized services such as databases, web servers, file servers, container orchestration, moving to a PaaS allows for a serverless architecture. A serverless architecture negates the need to manage and patch operating systems, middleware and manage server instances. This also reduces an organization's IT Lifecycle Management burden. Users sometimes worry that using PaaS will cause vendor lock-in. By using PaaS that have alternatives elsewhere in the market will avoid lock-in. Being able to extract your business data and business rules from a PaaS is key to avoiding lock-in. Most cloud providers offer database, web server, and file server platforms. While migrating from one to another may not be completely painless, migration tools and APIs exist to allow for this possibility.
Containers is an increasingly popular method to deploy applications. If your application is stateless, moving it to a container will not only help portability, but also help with your organization's adoption of DevOps practices.
Refactor (Re-Architect)[edit | edit source]
Refactoring is the most costly and time consuming of all strategies. This is an opportunity to take full advantage of cloud-native architectures by introducing elastic scaling of resources.
Adding disaster recover capabilities is other option for refactoring.
Migrating away from less common OSes such AIX, UNIX, or Solaris may require extensive changes to the application.
Due to the high cost of refactoring, this strategy should only be applied to high business value applications.
Replace (Repurchase)[edit | edit source]
This is an opportunity to determine if Software-as-a-Service solutions for some of the COTS or custom built application you may have running today. Migrating to SaaS is an opportunity to access the latest version of that service and to lower lifecycle management burden. For example, if you operate a legacy email application, you may want to take the opportunity to replace it with Office 365.
Choose Your Migration Target[edit | edit source]
Choose the target, or where the application will be migrated to, for each application.
Enterprise Data Centre (EDC): a new data centre with low technical risks
Cloud: a public cloud service provider available from the SSC Cloud Broker
Identify Data Centre[edit | edit source]
Ensure applications are correctly allocated to its current legacy data centre. The data centre is an essential reporting dimension when TBS tracks your portfolio's progress.
Identify Mission Critical Applications[edit | edit source]
Ensure mission critical applications are correctly identified.
Identify Operating Systems[edit | edit source]
Ensure the operating systems for each application are correctly identified. This will be used to ensure all operating systems beyond end-of-life are addressed through a replatform.
Generate Portfolio Analysis Dashboard[edit | edit source]
Request that TBS generate a dashboard of your application portfolio. This will ensure your decisions have been correctly reflected. A sample of the dashboard that is generated is found here:
Engage SSC Project Manager and WLM Factory[edit | edit source]
It is likely you have already been working with your SSC Project Manager. If not, talk to your Service Delivery Manager. At this point it would be prudent to work with a supplier qualified on the WLM Factory to help with planning and cost estimates.
Document Project Milestones (Roadmap)[edit | edit source]
Document Cost Estimates[edit | edit source]
An App Mod Cost estimates template has been devised to identify cost estimates. A Memorandum of Understanding between the GC CIO and the Deputy Head of a department will be agreed upon by both parties to secure the funding for execution phase. The MoU generic template can be found here (insert template).
Gate2: GC EARB Endorsement and MoU to Release Funds[edit | edit source]
At this point the discovery phase is completed. The analysis and planning undertaken as part of discovery will be presented to GC EARB as part of requesting endorsement for releasing funds for the execution phase.
The generic template for the presenting your discovery analysis and funding approval to move to execution.
As part of the GC EARB a CIO will explain their migration strategy and target choices. This includes how those choices align to the Cloud First policy requirement (requirement 6.4.2) and meeting requirement 6.1.1 of the Directive..
If and when endorsement is provided by GC EARB, approval will be requested from the GC CIO. A Memorandum of Understanding between the GC CIO and the deputy head of the requesting department will be agreed to by both parties.
Reporting Requirements[edit | edit source]
As per section 3: Reporting Requirements of the signed MOU between your department and TBS, the executive project dashboard is due at the end of each quarter. Please find the Executive project dashboard tool to be used to report the status of your modernization strategies to the TBS Oversight Team. This is a standard template that is used to monitor projects with further instructionsif required can be found here: .
Execution[edit | edit source]
Once priorities are reached the impacted partner departments are notified, and Application Modernization starter kit package, along with application modernization handbook and FAQ documents are provided. This package contains GC EARB template, App Mod Cost estimates template (used to identify funding requirements), Departmental & Data Centre View dashboard, Application Risk Review dashboard, and Business case template.
Partner departments are provided guidance/assistance throughout the engagement journey.
Partner Departments are endorsed by governance (WLM Working group, GC EARB, ADM CEPP, and DM CEPP) and funding becomes available to initiate the discovery phase. A Memorandum of Understanding between the Government of Canada’s Chief Information Officer (GC CIO) and the Deputy Head of a department will be agreed upon by both parties to secure the funding.
Lessons Learned[edit | edit source]
Change is hard. Cloud requires a major culture shift in the organization, especially in IT as it means radical transformation to some roles. Do not underestimate the fear that people will have. Organizational change management must be at the forefront.
Strong support required by deputy head and all levels of senior leadership. Due to the magnitude of change required and the underlying complexity, the senior management table MUST demonstrate consistent, strong leadership to ensure success.
Cloud is a journey, not a destination. It is very complex, and will take longer than you think. Start now, before you have all of the information. BUT – start smaller and simple, avoid serious injury when you fall. Because you will fall. Learn to crawl before trying to run. Fully embracing cloud will take years.
Partner with others. Having an integrated project team with SSC has been key success factor. Leverage the expertise of industry and of others that have gone before you.
Strong support required by deputy head and all levels of senior leadership.
Shallow pool of resources with the required expertise. Resources are routinely targeted by other departments and private sector. Ability to attract and retain talent is key, and is very challenging in public sector environment.
Products may not be as advertised. While the products may be released as GA, and have been tested on the open market, they do not necessarily function as intended. There may be a lot of back and forth with the vendor (in our case MS) in order to get the functionality you were expecting - add some contingency time to your project for this.
Voice your concerns immediately. You have to watch your costs like a hawk and have a strong understanding of what the costs should be - more importantly, you have to voice your concerns immediately to the vendor so that they can investigate and adjust. eg Log analytics
Be like water You have to work with a singular vision and purpose, but you have to be like water otherwise. The landscape in the cloud is ever changing - gone are the days of set it and forget it. Also, politically, there are always changes too - so you must be prepared to pivot when needed. eg. Pathfinder, APDC Closure, desktop, etc...
References[edit | edit source]
TB Policies & Standards[edit | edit source]
Policy on Management of Information Technology
Direction for Electronic Data Residency, ITPIN No: 2017-02
Guidance[edit | edit source]
Government of Canada Digital Playbook (draft)
Government of Canada Security Control Profile for Cloud-Based GC IT Services
Government of Canada Cloud Security Risk Management Approach and Procedures
CSE ITSG-22 Baseline Security Requirements for Network Security Zones in the Government of Canada
CSE ITSG-38 Network Security Zoning – Design Consideration for Placement of Services within Zones
CSE ITSG.30.031 V2 User Authentication Guidance for Information Technology Systems
CSE ITSG.40.062 Guidance on Securely Configuring Network Protocols
Blog[edit | edit source]
The GC Accelerators - Accelerating the Secure Adoption of Cloud Services
Part 1: Application Modernisation — Making IT Delivery Less Effort
Part 2: Application Modernisation — Understanding Modernisation Strategies
Part 3: Application Modernisation — Assessing Your Portfolio
Part 4: Application Modernisation — Choosing Your Target
Part 4 ¾: Application Modernisation – Continuous Modernisation