제품
통합데모 예약
지금 전화하세요:(800) 931-5930
Capterra Reviews

제품

  • Pass
  • 데이터 인텔리전스
  • WMS
  • YMS
  • 배송
  • RMS
  • OMS
  • PIM
  • 부기
  • 트랜로드

통합

  • B2C 및 전자상거래
  • B2B 및 옴니채널
  • 기업
  • 생산성 및 마케팅
  • 배송 및 주문 처리

리소스

  • 가격
  • IEEPA 관세 환불 계산기
  • 다운로드
  • 도움말 센터
  • 산업
  • 보안
  • 이벤트
  • 블로그
  • 사이트맵
  • 데모 예약
  • 문의하기

뉴스레터를 구독하세요.

제품 업데이트 및 뉴스를 받아보세요. 받은 편지함. 스팸이 없습니다.

ItemItem
개인정보 보호정책약관 서비스데이터 보호

저작권 항목, LLC 2026 . All Rights Reserved

SOC for Service OrganizationsSOC for Service Organizations

    Federated Infrastructure: CubeworkFreight & Logistics Glossary Term Definition

    HomeGlossaryPrevious: Federated Indexfederated infrastructuredistributed systemsdata governancemulti-clouddecentralizationIT architecture
    See all terms

    What is Federated Infrastructure? Guide for Business Leaders

    Federated Infrastructure

    Definition

    Federated Infrastructure refers to a network architecture where data, applications, and processing capabilities are distributed across multiple, semi-autonomous nodes or domains. Instead of a single, monolithic system, control and data remain distributed while maintaining a level of coordination or interoperability across the entire ecosystem.

    Why It Matters

    In today's complex digital landscape, relying on a single point of control introduces significant risks related to latency, single points of failure, and regulatory compliance. Federated models allow organizations to meet diverse operational needs—such as data sovereignty requirements or localized performance demands—without sacrificing overall system integrity.

    How It Works

    Operationally, federated infrastructure relies on defined protocols and governance layers. Each local node maintains autonomy over its data and local operations. However, a central coordination layer manages metadata, security policies, and interoperability standards, allowing different parts of the infrastructure to communicate and collaborate securely.

    Common Use Cases

    • Multi-Cloud Deployments: Organizations using services from AWS, Azure, and GCP can federate their infrastructure to manage workloads consistently across disparate cloud environments.
    • Edge Computing: Deploying processing power closer to data sources (e.g., IoT devices) while maintaining a connection to a central management plane.
    • Data Sovereignty: Meeting strict regional regulations (like GDPR) by keeping specific datasets physically resident within defined geographic boundaries while allowing aggregated, anonymized analysis centrally.

    Key Benefits

    • Resilience and Availability: Failure in one node does not compromise the entire system.
    • Scalability: Resources can be added incrementally at the appropriate local level.
    • Compliance: Facilitates adherence to varied regulatory frameworks by localizing sensitive data.

    Challenges

    • Complexity: Managing disparate technologies and governance models across many nodes is inherently complex.
    • Interoperability Overhead: Establishing and maintaining seamless communication standards between autonomous domains requires significant engineering effort.
    • Security Consistency: Ensuring uniform security posture across all decentralized components is a continuous operational challenge.

    Related Concepts

    • Microservices: A pattern for building applications as a collection of small, independent services.
    • Distributed Ledger Technology (DLT): Technologies that inherently manage distributed, shared state.
    • Hybrid Cloud: A specific implementation where private and public clouds are interconnected and managed as a single entity.

    Keywords