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Source:-networkworld.com
Google Cloud this week bought a mainframe cloud-migration service firm Cornerstone Technology with an eye toward helping Big Iron customers move workloads to the private and public cloud.
Google said the Cornerstone technology â found in its G4 platform â will shape the foundation of its future mainframe-to-Google Cloud offerings and help mainframe customers modernize applications and infrastructure.
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âThrough the use of automated processes, Cornerstoneâs tools can break down your Cobol, PL/1, or Assembler programs into services and then make them cloud native, such as within a managed, containerized environmentâ wrote Howard Weale, Googleâs director, Transformation Practice, in a blog about the buy.
âAs the industry increasingly builds applications as a set of services, many customers want to break their mainframe monolith programs into either Java monoliths or Java microservices,â Weale stated.
Google Cloudâs Cornerstone service will:
Develop a migration roadmap where Google will assess a customerâs mainframe environment and create a roadmap to a modern services architecture.
Convert any language to any other language and any database to any other database to prepare applications for modern environments.
Automate the migration of workloads to the Google Cloud.
âEasy mainframe migration will go a long way as Google attracts large enterprises to its cloud,â said Matt Eastwood, senior vice president, Enterprise Infrastructure, Cloud, Developers and Alliances, IDC wrote in a statement.
The Cornerstone move is also part of Googleâs effort stay competitive in the face of mainframe-migration offerings from Amazon Web Services, IBM/RedHat and Microsoft.
While the idea of moving legacy applications off the mainframe might indeed be beneficial to a business, Gartner last year warned that such decisions should be taken very deliberately.
âThe value gained by moving applications from the traditional enterprise platform onto the next âbright, shiny thingâ rarely provides an improvement in the business process or the companyâs bottom line. A great deal of analysis must be performed and each cost accounted for,â Gartner stated in a report entitled Considering Leaving Legacy IBM Platforms? Beware, as Cost Savings May Disappoint, While Risking Quality. âLegacy platforms may seem old, outdated and due for replacement. Yet IBM and other vendors are continually integrating open-source tools to appeal to more developers while updating the hardware. Application leaders should reassess the capabilities and quality of these platforms before leaving them.