Another gaming startup pulls back from the cloud

It looks like Zynga’s infrastructure strategy is rubbing off on social gaming startups. Digital Chocolate, purveyor of social games such as Millionaire City and Pro MMA Fighter, is following in Zynga’s footsteps of launching games in the cloud, then bringing them back in house when demand levels off. It doesn’t have Zynga’s much ballyhooed hybrid cloud infrastructure quite yet, but Digital Chocolate is working on its own flavor of the ideal gaming cloud.

Alfred Tsai, Digital Chocolate’s director of global IT and network operations, told me the company was operating entirely in Amazon Web Services, but decided to bring some games back in-house when performance issues got to be too much. AWS’s database servers were plenty robust, he explained, but the backend network was just too slow. Digital Chocolate couldn’t utilize the database servers to their maximum performance because the network couldn’t keep up with the transaction volume.

Now, Digital Chocolate still launches new games on AWS, but it runs its most-popular games in-house. It relies on a 10 GbE network backbone, as well as storage appliances from a startup company called Tintri. Tintri’s VMstore appliance mixes solid-state and hard disk drives to balance performance and cost, and is designed specifically for virtualized environments. Tsai said Digital Chocolate is still experiencing performance levels around 50,000 IOPS with its Tintri boxes, despite the fact that it has yet to upgrade from the beta version of the product.

One of the big benefits, he said, is that Tintri lets Digital Chocolate manage its entire set of gaming data as one big data store rather than having to break it up into multiple volumes. Each Tintri box provides 8.5TB of capacity that act as a single datastore, which Tsai said is far more than what VMware supports using typical virtualized SAN storage. Additionally, because Tintri monitors storage performance per VM, Tsai said it lets Digital Chocolate better architect games to run on its internal infrastructure.

For those curious about Tintri, it’s backed by NEA and Lightspeed Venture Partners, and was founded by Kieran Harty, who led all desktop and server research and product development at VMware from 1999 through 2006.

Meanwhile, Tsai acknowledges that Digital Chocolate has a way to go before it has a hybrid cloud system as apparently seamless as Zynga’s Z Cloud, but it’s working toward such a setup.

He also noted that Digital Chocolate is experimenting heavily with other cloud providers in the hopes of achieving more resiliency. AWS is a great short-term replacement for physical hardware, he said, but it’s prone to outages, particularly its Elastic Block Storage service, which Tintri uses. EBS was the cause of AWS’s four-day outage in April that made national headlines.

One of the cloud providers Tsai is particularly impressed with is Virtustream. AWS launched its Direct Connect feature yesterday that provides direct connections between Equinix and AWS data centers, but, Tsai said, Digital Chocolate worked with Virtustream to run a 20-Gigabit pipe from the cloud provider’s East Coast data center to Digital Chocolate’s colocation cage in San Francisco. He said the support and costs are big improvements over AWS, too.

And Virtustream is working with RightScale and developing its own API, Tsai explained, which will make the easier to manage. If you’ll recall, RightScale is the middle man for Zynga’s cloud infrastructure, providing a uniform management interface for its AWS- and Cloud.com-based resources. APIs let customers write applications that can make calls directly to the cloud infrastructure to perform certain tasks.

Image courtesy of Flickr user Bill Ward’s brickpile.

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