Harvard Med School has Network Traffic Cop
Like most professional schools, Harvard Medical Schools relationships
extend far beyond its ivy-covered buildings. With hundreds of medical, dental,
and doctoral students, and 15,000 faculty, medical residents, and fellows spread
across 18 affiliated hospitals and institutions, Harvard has a vested interest
in maintaining a working network that links all of its affiliates.
Harvards eCommons Web portal is the medical schools gateway and
provides access to such services as the digital library and
e-curriculum resources. To protect the portal, HMS already had firewalls in
place. However, there was no solution in place to prevent a halt in service
should a firewall fail. Determined to keep the portal running with no downtime,
the schools technology administrators decided to install high-availability
software. The product they chose, Rainfinity Inc.s RainWall, is designed
to enhance security and provide protection from single points of failure.
The high-availability software resides on the same gateway as the firewall
and virtual private network software and detects failures in both hardware and
software components, including itself. The software shifts traffic from failed
firewalls and gateways to functional ones, without disrupting connections. Load-balancing
features shift the traffic among all the nodes in a cluster, maximizing resources
even when all components are working properly. This ensures not only that the
system will work without fail, but also that the software makes a constant contribution
to the efficiency of the network. Its inline, online, and serving
a secondary purpose even when everything is up and running, says J'e Bruno,
HMS associate dean for information technology and chief information officer.
Because medicine is in business around the clock, HMS cant afford downtime.
We cant let the business of science be interrupted, says Bruno.
With RainWall, HMS can perform hardware upgrades and operating system maintenance
without losing system availability or sacrificing throughput performance. Furthermore,
because RainWall is used in an active/active standby configuration, HMS can
take advantage of previously underused hardware as well as current hardware
investments.
For more information, visit www.rainfinity.com.