What is application migration?

Application migration is the process of moving applications from one environment to the other. Traditionally, applications were hosted in on-premises data centers or colocation facilities, which created inefficiencies in app scaling, upgrading, and maintenance. Application migration moves applications to a more flexible cloud-based infrastructure for improved performance and user experience. It involves setting up new deployment pipelines or even rewriting and redesigning applications to benefit fully from cloud services. Application migration requires proper planning and a systematic approach to minimize business disruptions.

What are the benefits of application migration?

Organizations choose to migrate their software applications from on premises to the cloud for several reasons. 

Flexibility

When you migrate applications to the cloud, you can easily access the computing resources that you need. Instead of powering your workloads with on-premises servers, you use cloud technologies to virtualize the required computing environment. For example, you can resize the computing capacity for your applications on Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) to meet changing requirements. 

With cloud migration, you can also deploy workloads closer to end users. The cloud environment’s distributed architecture improves application performance because applications and data reside geographically closer to the end users who consume it. You can easily install additional modules such as a load balancer and a content delivery network (CDN) to further improve application responsiveness and availability. 

Read about cloud migration

Read about CDNs

Cost efficiency

With application migration, you can enjoy significant cost savings by minimizing capital expenditure. Instead of investing in and maintaining expensive computing equipment, you subscribe to cloud computing tools and environments on pay-as-you-go plans. Cloud providers fully manage operating systems, databases, and other IT infrastructure, which significantly reduces licensing and infrastructure maintenance costs. You can optimize costs and manage risks by scaling your digital offerings to end users.

Access to advanced technology

Application migration goes beyond moving software applications from on premises to the cloud. Some organizations shift their workloads to access cutting-edge technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML), blockchain, and augmented reality (AR). You can offer improved customer experiences at a fraction of the cost. You can also explore new software strategies and remain competitive in growing markets. For example, you can use Amazon Bedrock to build and scale generative AI applications more effortlessly in the cloud. 

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Read about machine learning

Read about blockchain technology

Read about generative AI

Improved operations

Successful application migration can minimize disruptions that affect business revenue. With the cloud architecture, DevOps teams can set up continuous integration and continuous delivery (CI/D) pipelines, which enable swift responses to bug fixes and feature releases. Migrating workloads to a cloud environment also improves availability, recoverability, and data security. For example, you can move applications that are deployed on virtual machines (VM) to containers with application migration tools. Containerized apps are easier to replicate across cloud environments, which ensures service availability. 

Read about DevOps

Read about continuous integration

What are application migration strategies?

Organizations adopt different strategies when they migrate applications to the cloud because of underlying technical complexities, computing requirements, and changing business needs. 

Rehost

Rehost, or lift and shift, involves moving an application from its current environment to the cloud without modification. In this strategy, you use cloud migration services to move many applications to their new environment without interrupting service delivery. With a properly planned strategy, rehosting means that users can continue to access their workloads during the migration. 

Replatform

Replatform, or lift and reshape, is an approach that takes an application off its existing platform and moves it to the cloud. With this method, you perform some optimization to ensure that the application benefits from cloud features in the new environment. For example, you can shift an SQL database currently hosted on a physical server to Amazon RDS for SQL Server with automated hardware provisioning, maintenance, and scaling. You can also move entire VMs to the cloud by encapsulating them with containers. This reduces efforts to modify current software setups when you’re shifting between environments. 

Refactor

With refactoring, or lift, tinker, and shift, you can use cloud-native features when you’re migrating applications. When you’re refactoring, you can make considerable changes to the application’s code base. Also known as rearchitecting, this strategy is suitable for decoupling workloads from physical platforms. Refactoring requires sufficient planning, implementation, and testing to ensure that the revised software is functional despite considerable code changes.

Repurchase

Repurchase is an application migration strategy that involves discarding existing software modules and replacing them with newer cloud-supported versions. Organizations use this strategy when they buy new software in the cloud marketplace because it’s more financially sensible than rearchitecting legacy systems. When you repurchase applications, you benefit from the software as a subscription (SaaS) model. Cloud-based applications also offer features that are built specifically for cloud environments, such as remote access, serverless deployment, and self-managed servicing. 

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Retain

Retaining is a strategic move when you don’t have the budget or resources to move the application to the cloud immediately. It can also happen if chained dependencies mean that the application has to remain in its current on-premises environment for a certain period until other software modules have been migrated. With retaining, cloud bursting strategies support the utilization of cloud resources if the on-premises infrastructure is at capacity.

Read about cloud bursting

Retire

Retiring involves discontinuing the support of an application instead of moving it to a new environment. You might retire an application if there are no business benefits for moving it to the cloud. For example, some applications are no longer in use but continue to consume on-premises computing resources. This approach is also viable if your software vendor has discontinued support for the application. After retiring, you can build new cloud-native applications from scratch or purchase new SaaS solutions that better meet your requirements.

The following diagram explains how migration readiness works, from the current IT snapshot, to discovering and organizing data, to the preceding migration strategies.

What is the application migration process?

Successful application migration requires a well-coordinated strategy among various stakeholders. The following steps can help you migrate applications to the cloud.

Conduct a technical audit

Assess your existing applications, tech stacks, data movement, and business goals to identify the benefits and potential risks of migration. This provides an overview of the scale and impact of migration on your organization and daily operations. It also helps you identify cloud providers that offer the necessary technologies to simplify, manage, and automate your migration project. 

Plan the migration

Next, visualize the final outcome and work backward to bridge the technical gaps between the current and new computing environments. Analyze the factors that are influencing the process, including technical, business, and security considerations. Then, assemble an application migration team to implement and facilitate the planned changes. Application migration is complex and requires a multidisciplinary team of system administrators, software developers, data engineers, security officers, and other IT specialists. 

Choose a migration strategy

Decide which migration strategy best suits your organization’s goals, priorities, and resources. For example, you can retain specific applications on in-house servers while shifting others to the cloud. If you’re moving multiple workloads to the cloud, you might choose a phased migration to allow room for remediations and service continuity. We also recommend factoring in the timeline required to implement each strategy. 

Test adequately

Create a test environment so that your migration team can rehearse the process before transitioning. Conducting adequate testing prepares your team for possible challenges and follows through with confidence. Review the test results to ensure that data integrity, application behavior, and system functionality remain unaffected in the mock migration. 

Perform application migration

After you’ve finalized the plan, move the workloads to their new environment in stages. A phased cloud migration approach provides stability and continuity to application users. Ensure that the migration team is available to handle technical issues that arise. At the same time, inform all users about the process, duration, and anticipated challenges. 

Monitor migrated applications

Continue to observe the performance of your applications after you have shifted them to the cloud. Alert the migration team for disruptions, data integrity issues, or any irregular behaviors that affect service delivery. Revisit and refine the application migration planning process if necessary to optimize future workflows.

What are application migration best practices?

Application migration is a complicated process that consumes considerable time and resources. The following best practices make migrating apps more manageable:

  • Get all stakeholders on board to support the migration effort. Convey the benefits, goals, and motivations to the entire team so that everyone shares a common understanding.
  • Engage an external IT partner to complement your in-house migration team if necessary. Application and data migration requires skillsets that some organizations don’t possess. 
  • Back up all files, databases, and apps in the existing environments as a contingency measure. Use the backups to roll back changes if you encounter issues when you migrate.
  • Start conservatively by migrating small numbers of non-critical workloads. Then, automate the process where possible to scale future migration. 
  • Retain the test environment to enable testing of subsequent changes and improvements. This ensures that migration teams can validate future configurations safely before they push configurations to production. 

Read about data migration

How can AWS help with your application migration needs?

With AWS Application Migration Service, you can automatically move your applications from servers with supported operating systems to the Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud. You can migrate and modernize your on-premises and cloud workloads, as well as access AWS supported features such as disaster recovery and license conversion. 

Application Migration Service offers the following features:

  • It reduces migration costs by providing a common tool for various applications
  • You can migrate workloads to multiple AWS Regions to improve accessibility, resilience, and compliance
  • It supports nondisruptive tests and enables switchover to production workloads within minutes.  

Get started with application migration on AWS by creating an account today.

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