Home > Harvard Med School has Network Traffic Cop

Features

Harvard Med School has Network Traffic Cop

12/26/2001

Like most professional schools, Harvard Medical School’s 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.

Harvard’s eCommons Web portal is the medical school’s 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 school’s 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. “It’s 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 can’t afford downtime. “We can’t 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.



Recommended Reading
  • Moodle Gets SCORM Improvements, Security Fixes

    New versions of Moodle have been released, bringing the most recent stable build to 1.9.3. The latest round of updates includes a number of bug fixes and security enhancements, as well as improvements to the SCORM module.

  • Free 'Morro' Antivirus To Replace Microsoft OneCare

    Microsoft is rolling out a free antivirus software program for consumers that will compete with products made by Symantec and McAfee. Code-named "Morro," the AV app is expected to be available by the end of 2009.

  • Microsoft Demos New SQL Server Features at PASS

    Microsoft Wednesday previewed the ability to centrally manage applications and resources in the planned upgrade of SQL Server, code-named "Kilimanjaro."

  • Microsoft Unveils Exchange and SharePoint as Services

    Microsoft exec Stephen Elop on Monday announced two hosted solutions from Microsoft--Exchange Online and SharePoint Online--which are now available to organizations of all sizes in the United States. The software, paid for by annual subscriptions, is hosted on Microsoft's servers and supported by Microsoft's channel partners.

  • 6 Ways Not To Become Rote Using Instructional Technology

    There are, in my experience, six strategies to consider with any use of technology that will guard against rote use of technology and facilitate critical analysis of teaching and learning effectiveness. In this article, I'll share with you the checklist I work with and encourage others to work with in learning about and using new technology.

  • Bringing Student Web "Stuff" to Campus Enterprise Systems

    How can an institution incorporate Web 2.0 learning opportunities for students, and evidence of learning from those opportunities, into existing campus technologies and processes? PlugJam is providing part of the answer.