A robust IT infrastructure supports DENSO’s DX. The company has been building and operating its private cloud platform ALADIN (Attractive Landmark for All DENSO Infrastructure) since 2012, providing it as a service to its business divisions and group companies. As an IT platform that provides services securely and at a low cost, ALADIN contributes to improving the business speed of DENSO and its group companies, reducing IT-related costs and environmental impact.
Technically, it is built as a virtualization platform using VMware ESX. The two main components are virtual servers (infrastructure as a service) and storage areas, which allow business divisions and group companies to freely build and operate systems. ALADIN has undergone numerous updates and expansions since its initial implementation, leading to its current state. ALADIN is home to a wide variety of systems used by various departments, and a massive amount of data, including critical information such as analysis and design data for product development, is accumulated daily. For this reason, a major focus of expansion is the addition of storage capacity, with several hundred terabytes of capacity added each year.
At the time, DENSO prioritized cost optimization for ALADIN, selecting a different manufacturer or vendor each time it was expanded. As a result, even though the upper-layer operating system and virtualization software were the same, multiple cloud infrastructures with different lower-layer hardware were running. Operating this infrastructure was cumbersome, and the workload was significant.
Because the infrastructure to be introduced changed every year, operation manuals had to be created and operators trained each time. In the event of a failure, it was necessary to identify which infrastructure was experiencing the problem and address it according to the specific procedures established for each system, raising concerns about potential misunderstandings and operational errors.
Even more problematic was the regular update process. Because a new infrastructure had been introduced every year, equipment reaching the end of its warranty period required annual updates. The recent increase in data volume meant that individual migrations took an enormous amount of time, sometimes resulting in weekly migrations for nearly a year. While the updates were necessary, they were not creative work, and maintaining staff motivation was a challenge.
“Therefore, we aimed to realize a sustainable ALADIN. In recent years, our company has been promoting the use of the public cloud, but we also believe that the demand for on-premises systems will continue for reasons such as response time. So, we decided to refresh to an integrated platform that minimizes the burden of conventional operation methods and periodic updates and can operate stably over the long term,” says Mr. Ishida.