Read on for the full scoop of the latest Sitefinity Cloud add-on ensuring the highest possible uptime of your website or application and the business continuity of your project. Multi-region failover is like an insurance policy—great to have, but hopefully never need.
One of the key things about platforms as a service, such as Sitefinity Cloud, is ensuring uninterrupted service and operations. From small business to enterprise, organizations just need their websites and applications up and running. Business continuity is critical. Simple as that.
The solution? Multi-region Failover is a decisive next step in Sitefinity Cloud’s sustained effort towards providing a 99.9% uptime SLA. We’re bolstering protection against critical incidents and infrastructure outage, raising the bar in terms of availability and disaster recovery.
Multi-region failover is providing a robust disaster recovery option to Sitefinity Cloud Customers, enabling engineering teams to restore service availability to visitors, content creators and developers within 30 minutes or less in the event of an infrastructure outage.
In a multi-region failover setup, every environment, for which you have enabled failover, has a replica of its entire service stack in a secondary region. In the event of an infrastructure failure or outage affecting the primary region that cannot be resolved quickly enough, the secondary region will onboard the traffic and restore services.
The failover mechanism in Sitefinity Cloud is based on a hot-warm model with a Primary and a Secondary region where the latter is being kept on standby and ready to switch to in case of a disaster or critical failure affecting the primary region.
In a hot-warm model, the Secondary region stack is not always on, making it easier to manage the process and resources. When needed though, it can be deployed quickly enough and conveniently take over until the service in the Primary region is fully restored.
The Failover mechanism has been precisely configured to work across the multiple levels of the Sitefinity Cloud infrastructure. Parts of it are automated, but human intervention is required at critical stages of the process to prevent a disproportionate response to false positive incidents. In other words, the ultimate decision whether to switch to the Failover region or roll back to the Primary region, if troubleshooting succeeds, is that of the Sitefinity Cloud on-duty team—all within those 30 minutes or less.
The diagram below describes the process and the infrastructure components involved in detail, from the CDN level where the web application firewall and caching rules are applied, through the Azure stack (App Service instances, Redis cache, SQL database and the Azure search), to the Sitefinity Cloud Management Portal.
The Failover mechanism is perfectly aligned with the Sitefinity Cloud Management Portal pipelines. To ensure code consistency across all regions, the CI/CD process is configured to deploy new releases to the Secondary region App Service whenever a package is successfully pushed through the environments in the Primary region.
On database level, there is synchronous data replication in place to make sure the SQL instances in both regions are synced and prevent data loss in the event of a failover. Every two hours, the search indexes are synced as well between the Primary and the Secondary region. Now, this implies a potential delta in the search index data in case of a disaster recovery, but shorter sync intervals can be considered on a case-by-case basis.
Moreover, the auto-scaling rules you may have in place in your primary region are fully accounted for in the Failover mechanism. So, for example if a critical incident occurs during a traffic spike with extra instances spun up to accommodate the increased load, the Secondary region will auto-scale to the same number of app instances.
Another important thing to note is how Failover clicks with CDN. Sitefinity Cloud employs Cloudflare’s content delivery network, a geo-distributed system of servers for ultrafast delivery of content and media. The assets served by Sitefinity are cached under these CDN nodes, which are fully autonomous of the server hosting the Sitefinity application.
Other than providing high speed of delivery, CDN itself is an extra layer of insurance in the event of a Sitefinity application downtime. Effectively, your website(s) remain available to visitors, serving the content that has been cached under CDN.
To sum it all up, in the event of a critical failure in the Primary region, the Sitefinity Cloud on-duty team gets notified and starts troubleshooting. But at the same time, they start warming up the Secondary region, bringing it to a hot standby—ready to onboard the web application traffic.
Depending on whether the troubleshooting succeeds, the on-duty team has two options: call the failover off or Complete Failover to make the switch to region 2. So, two automated processes and a qualified decision-maker are seeing to it that your application is back up and running within 30 minutes or less in the event of critical outage.
The Failover mechanism is available per environment, so you can enable it on Production, Staging and even Content Authoring—which maybe a good idea if you have already opted for the Content Pipeline.
Here’s the rundown of the key benefits of the Sitefinity Cloud Multi-region Failover:
Multi-region Failover is available as an add-on service at an extra cost. Check out the Sitefinity Cloud Tiers for details and get in touch with your Sitefinity Cloud rep today. If you want to know more about the nuts and bolts, take a closer look at the Sitefinity Cloud Failover Mechanism documentation. In case of emergency, break glass. Oh wait, with the Multi-region Failover add-on you have another option. Do nothing and do it well.
Get in Touch to Learn More
A Sitefinity Product Marketer, Anton has a mixed background of software and writing for the web. He has spent the last 10 years in software development, on the project management and product ownership side, all the while writing about technology, gadgets and their use and usability. He is always trying to get to the bottom of things without missing the bigger picture.
Let our experts teach you how to use Sitefinity's best-in-class features to deliver compelling digital experiences.
Learn MoreSubscribe to get all the news, info and tutorials you need to build better business apps and sites
Progress collects the Personal Information set out in our Privacy Policy and the Supplemental Privacy notice for residents of California and other US States and uses it for the purposes stated in that policy.
You can also ask us not to share your Personal Information to third parties here: Do Not Sell or Share My Info
We see that you have already chosen to receive marketing materials from us. If you wish to change this at any time you may do so by clicking here.
Thank you for your continued interest in Progress. Based on either your previous activity on our websites or our ongoing relationship, we will keep you updated on our products, solutions, services, company news and events. If you decide that you want to be removed from our mailing lists at any time, you can change your contact preferences by clicking here.