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Data Center Technologies

Data Center Technologies

Data Center Technologies

Data Center Technologies

Data Center Technologies

Data Center Technologies

Data Center Technologies

Data Center Technologies

Ing. Marcel Kuza

(2)

Agenda



Introduction to Data Center Solutions (by IBM)



Data Center

Networking Solutions (By Cisco Systems)



Data Center

Site Solutions (by APC)



Data Center

Connectivity Solutions (by Commscope)



Data Center

Site Solutions (by Emerson)



Data Center

Networking Solutions (By Juniper Networks)



Data Center

Networking Solutions (By F5)

(3)

Data center is…

… a facility used to house computer systems and associated

(4)

Integrating Information, Applications & Infrastructure

This transformation spans across the organization

Processes and Applications

Infrastructure Organization

Facilities

Strategy and Vision

Information

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(5)

“More than 70% of the world’s Global 1000 organizations will have

to modify their data center facilities significantly during the next five

years.”

Gartner, September 2007

Data Center under business pressure

53% of organizations have undergone a reorganization of their

infrastructure and operations (I&O) department in the past five years

(6)

Challenges IT groups are facing today

Reducing risk

Ensure the right levels of security and resiliency

across all business data and processes

Breakthrough agility

Increase ability to quickly deliver new services to capitalize

on opportunities while containing costs and managing risk

Higher quality services

Improve quality of services and deliver new services

that help the business grow and reduce costs

Doing more with less

(7)

Today’s infrastructure isn’t built for what’s coming…

Kilowatt-hours wasted each year by consumers due to insufficient power usage information.

170 billion

Total sales missed each year because retailers don’t have the right

products in stock to meet customer demand.

$93 billion

25 billion

Global trading systems are under extreme stress, handling billions of market data messages each day.

70¢ per $1

70% on average is spent on maintaining current IT infrastructures versus adding new capabilities.

33% of consumers notified of a security breach will terminate their relationship with the company they perceive as responsible.

33% will leave

Explosion of information driving 54% growth in storage shipments every year.

1.5x

(8)

By 2011, the world will be 10 times more instrumented then it

was in 2006. Internet connected devices will leap from 500M

to 1 Trillion.

2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 0 200 400 600 800 1,000 1,200 1,400 1,600 1,800

E

x

a

b

y

te

s

RFID,

Digital TV,

MP3 players,

Digital cameras,

Camera phones, VoIP,

Medical imaging, Laptops,

smart meters, multi-player games,

Satellite images, GPS, ATMs, Scanners, Sensors, Digital radio, DLP theaters, Telematics, Peer-to-peer, Email, Instant messaging, Videoconferencing, CAD/CAM, Toys, Industrial machines, Security systems, Appliances

10x

growth in

five years

Approximately 70% of the digital universe is created by individuals,

but enterprises are

(9)

Past

Centralized – Mainframe centric Shared Limited applications Limited access Unresponsive Industry standard HW Client / Server e-business

Current

Distributed Dedicated infrastructure Explosion of applications Ubiquitous access Fragmented islands of computing Inefficient  Virtualization  Web 2.0  Network

New

Re-centralization Shared infrastructure Transparent delivery of services Ubiquitous access with high bandwidth, low latency

Efficient, dynamic and responsive

(10)

New Enterprise Data Center

Stages of Adoption

Simplified

Shared

Dynamic

Drives IT efficiency

• Physical consolidation and optimization

• Virtualization of individual systems • Systems, network, and energy

management

Allows rapid deployment of new infrastructure and

services

• Highly virtualized resource pools - "ensembles" • Integrated IT service

management • Green by design

Is highly responsive and business-goal driven

• Virtualization of IT service • Business-driven service

management

(11)

Dynamic infrastructure deploys leading edge virtualization

and consolidation solutions

Improve service responsiveness

.

Reduce operating costs.



Consolidate via virtualization to fewer

systems.



Simplify management of the infrastructure.



Recapture floor space through consolidation.

Dynamically adapt to the peaks of

the business.

Manage availability in a 24/7 world.



Increase availability and improve resiliency.



Manage and secure data without affecting



Improve system, network and application

performance.



Process more information in real-time to

make better business decisions.



Bring new services online quickly.



Dynamically deliver resources where needed

most.

(12)

Cloud Services Delivery

 Elastic scaling  Rapid provisioning  Flexible pricing  Ease of use  Standardized offerings

Required Infrastructure Characteristics

for effective Cloud Delivery

 Open standards-based, service-oriented  Advanced virtualization and automated mgmt  Common components and processes

 Advanced security and resiliency  Easy to use service catalog

Dynamic infrastructures are foundational for cloud delivery

models

(13)

What is different about cloud computing?

With cloud computing

Without cloud computing

 Virtualized resources

 Automated service

management

 Standardized services

 Location

independent

 Rapid scalability

 Self-service

• Software • Hardware • Storage • Networking • Software • Hardware • Storage • Networking • Software • Hardware • Storage • Networking

(14)
(15)

• Top reasons for moving to a private cloud

include cost/resource efficiencies, as well as

enhancing speed and flexibility

• Security concerns are the top barrier to

adoption of both public and private clouds

• Three distinctive end-user cloud buying

patterns are emerging: exploratory,

solution-focused and transformational

• Financial Services, Manufacturing, High

Tech, Government and Retail are the top five

industries looking for cloud

Cost Take-out is

Key Driver

Security is

Top Concern

Adoption Patterns are

Emerging

Industries under the

Greatest Pressure

Lead Interest in Cloud

What the Market is Telling Us

(16)

Source: “Hype and Reality of Cloud Computing”, Everest, March, 2010

Downtime has proved to be a material risk for companies

moving their compute requirement to public clouds

(17)

Cloud computing delivers IT and business benefits

Automated

Faster cycle times

Lower operating expense

Optimized utilization

Improved compliance

Optimized security

Standardized

Easier access

Flexible pricing

Reuse and share

Easier to integrate

Virtualized

Higher utilization

Economy of scale

benefits

Lower capital expense

Higher quality services

Breakthrough agility

and reducing risk

Doing more with less

(18)

There is a spectrum of deployment options for cloud

computing

Private

Public

Hybrid

IT capabilities are provided “as a

service,” over an intranet, within the

enterprise and behind the firewall

Internal and external service delivery

methods are integrated

IT activities / functions are

provided “as a service,” over

the Internet

Third-party operated Third-party hosted and operated Enterprise data center Enterprise data center

Private cloud Hosted private

cloud Managed private cloud Enterprise Shared cloud services A Enterprise B Public cloud services A Users B

(19)

Public and Private Clouds are preferred for different

workloads

Database- and application-oriented

workloads emerge as most appropriate

 Data mining, text mining, or other analytics  Security

 Data warehouses or data marts

 Business continuity and disaster recovery  Test environment infrastructure

 Long-term data archiving/preservation  Transactional databases

 Industry-specific applications  ERP applications

Infrastructure workloads

emerge as most appropriate

 Audio/video/Web conferencing  Service help desk

 Infrastructure for training and demonstration  WAN capacity, VOIP Infrastructure

 Desktop

 Test environment infrastructure  Storage

 Data center network capacity  Server

Top public workloads

Top private workloads

(20)
(21)

The IBM Research Computing Cloud (RC2) is a living lab

to advance Research strategies.

India Zurich



Provides self service “on demand” delivery

solution for research computing resources

1



Zero touch support for the full life cycle

of service delivery

 Order creation  Approval process  E-mail notification  Automated provisioning  Monitoring

2

Research Compute Cloud (RC2)

(22)

Building a “FIRST-CLASS” Data Center Network

Gartner Consulting Group (2008)

"Web“

Servers

Application / DB

Servers

ADCs

ANPO

F – Flexible

I – Interconnect Support

R – Resilient

S – Storage Support

T – Terabit+

C – Controlled

L – Low latency

A – Application Fluent

S – Scalable

S – Secure

Controlled

Appl Fluent

Terabit+

Scale

Interconnect

Storage

Flexible

Reslient

• Application Delivery Controllers (ADC) Application Delivery Controllers (ADC) Application Delivery Controllers (ADC) Application Delivery Controllers (ADC) / Wan Optimization (ANPO)

/ Wan Optimization (ANPO) / Wan Optimization (ANPO) / Wan Optimization (ANPO) • Network SecurityNetwork SecurityNetwork SecurityNetwork Security

• Core Switching & Optical NetworkingCore Switching & Optical NetworkingCore Switching & Optical NetworkingCore Switching & Optical Networking • ManagementManagementManagementManagement

(23)
(24)
(25)

Network Design Considerations



Network Convergence (LAN & SAN)



L2 & L3 Boundaries



High Availability / Redundancy



Energy Efficiency



Network Security, Zones, AAA server



Applications load balancing & Optimization



Traffic Patterns and bandwidth Considerations



Management (Monitoring, Provision, Pro-active,

in-band/Out-band)

(26)

Virtualization, VM mobility and IT provisioning are driving

new data network requirements and challenges

A p p lic a ti o n S e rv ic e s D a ta C e n te r In fr a s tr u c tu re S e rv ic e s INTERNET SERVICE PROVIDER S to ra g e S e rv ic e s D a ta C e n te r E d g e C o n n e c ti v it y INTERNET SAN SAN STORAGE STORAGE PRIVATE WAN LAN WAN OPTIMIZATION SERVICES

Central and branch office users Remote access users

DATA CENTER ACCESS SECURITY SERVICES VIRTUALIZED APPLICATION

DELIVERY

VIRTUALIZED SERVER ACCESS

VIRTUALIZED APPLICATION DELIVERY

VIRTUALIZED L3 IP CORE

REMOTE ACCESS AND INTERNET SECURITY SERVICES

VIRTUALIZED L2 ETHERNET

VIRTUALIZED SERVER ACCESS SERVER ACCESS SECURITY

VIRTUALIZED SERVER PLATFORM(S) Virtual I/O Virtual/Blade

Switching

SERVER ACCESS SECURITY

Data Center A Data Center B

VIRTUALIZED SERVER PLATFORM(S) Virtual I/O Virtual/Blade

Switching

Server and storage consolidation and virtualization support

• Layer 2 domain architecture and scalability • Network configurations on mobile VMs

Centralized security policy enforcement

• User access control

• Security device placement and settings

Centralized application delivery

• Optimum application delivery • WAN Optimization

Infrastructure management and automation

• Network standardization vs. customization • Degree of automated network provisioning

Integration of silo’ed data center teams

• Configuration and management of platform specific network resources

• Disparate tools for virtual and physical network infrastructure

(27)
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(29)

Agenda



Introduction to Data Center Solutions (by IBM)



Data Center Network Solutions (By Cisco Systems)



Data Center

Site Solutions (by APC)



Data Center

Connectivity Solutions (by Commscope)



Data Center

Site Solutions (by Emerson)



Data Center

Network Solutions (By Juniper Networks)



Data Center

Network Solutions (By F5)

References

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