Article contents
Designing High Availability Architectures on Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI)
Abstract
Designing high availability (HA) architectures on Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) is fundamental to ensuring continuous operations, fault tolerance, and minimal service disruption for mission-critical enterprise workloads. OCI provides a comprehensive set of tools and architectural patterns—such as multi-availability domains (ADs), fault domains (FDs), load balancers, autonomous services, and disaster recovery regions—to build resilient and self-healing systems. This study explores how OCI’s distributed design, coupled with its networking and storage redundancy features, enables organizations to achieve five-nines availability while optimizing cost and performance. The paper examines architectural blueprints for key workloads, including web applications, databases, and containerized environments, highlighting the use of features like Oracle Data Guard, Traffic Management Steering Policies, and the Service Gateway for continuous access and failover. Furthermore, it evaluates design considerations such as synchronous replication, automated backup policies, and monitoring through Oracle Cloud Observability and Management services. By adopting these HA strategies, enterprises can align business continuity objectives with OCI’s native cloud-native capabilities, achieving scalable, secure, and resilient cloud architectures that withstand infrastructure, network, and application-level failures.
Article information
Journal
British Journal of Multidisciplinary Studies
Volume (Issue)
4 (1)
Pages
15-26
Published
Copyright
Copyright (c) 2025 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Open access

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Aims & scope
Call for Papers
Article Processing Charges
Publications Ethics
Google Scholar Citations
Recruitment