Sun Plugs Greener Data Centers (23-Aug-07)

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Current revision as of 10:13, 7 September 2007

Contents

MI Summary

Full article: Sun Plugs Greener Data Centers (23-Aug-07)

Sun is going green by consolidating into three new data centres which are more compact and use less energy than at present. The new technology provides a saving in power and cooling costs of $1.1 million per year, in addition to this it also provides the corporation with a 456% increase in computer power.

Sun has also created a set of services to help customers make the green transition in their own data centres; this is achieved by three Eco Ready Kits. These comprise of an Eco Assessment, Eco Optimisation and Eco Virtualisation kit.

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As many expected, virtualization is driving a whole new wave of server consolidation, and every major server maker is starting to brag about their own internal IT operations and how they walk the green walk, not just talk the green talk.

Sun Microsystems was one of the first of the server makers to try to raise our eco-consciousness, and did so for the self-serving reason that it wants to sell new servers to customers with lots of energy-wasteful machinery in the data center.

Sun, of course, could say the same thing about itself over the past few years, and that is why the company is revamping its data centers, consolidating down to three new data centers that are more compact, use less energy, and provide more computing throughput. And in addition to wanting to peddle new servers, storage, operating systems, and management tools to customers, Sun has also created a set of services to help customers make the green transition in their own data centers, regardless of whether or not they buy gear from Sun.

In Sun's Santa Clara, California, data center, the company has just completed the first phase of consolidation, reducing the server count from 2,177 units down to 1,240 and storage array count from 738 arrays down to 225; the rack dropped from 550 to 65 for all this gear. Obviously, servers have gotten a lot skinnier vertically and so have storage arrays, allowing such a compression. This consolidation took about three months.

The new gear burns about 500 kilowatt-hours of juice, down from 2,200 kilowatt-hours, saving about $1.1m a year in power and cooling costs but, perhaps more significantly, providing Sun with a 456% increasing in computing power. And because Sun shrunk the servers and storage rather than using similar gear, it was able to forgo spending an estimated $9.3m on building out the data center.

The servers are equipped with water-based cooling units, which suck the heat directly out of the rack, improving the efficiency of the cooling operations. Sun is in the process of shrinking this data center, which is its main facility, from 254,000 square feet to 127,000 square feet.

By going energy efficient, Silicon Valley Power, the local electric company in Santa Clara, has given Sun $750,000 in rebates and a one-time award of $250,000 for cooling innovation, which helped cover the cost of the data center upgrade.

Sun's two other data centers are smaller, and the improvements in performance and efficiency are a little different. Sun's Blackwater, England data center shrunk from 100 servers down to 80, reduced floor space from 2,200 square feet to 450 square feet, and reduced power from 184 kilowatt-hours down to 48 kilowatt-hours. (Sun didn't say how much more oomph this setup had.)

In its Bangalore, India, data center, Sun has cut the data center down from 10,400 square feet to 5,096 square feet, and ditched 300 older servers with 100 new ones, boosting compute capacity by 154% while shrinking the footprint of servers and storage by 51%.

Having done the hard work to cut costs and improve efficiencies in its own data centers, Sun wants to leverage that knowledge and provide services for a fee to help customers do the same. This is done through what Sun calls the Eco Ready Kits. There are three of them.

The Eco Assessment Kit basically gives a data center a physical exam, with Sun playing doctor. According to Ted Hoy, vice president of marketing for Sun's Systems group, this kit analyzes the health of the physical plant and the server and storage computing infrastructure; it also gathers up vital signs about how well the data center performs over time. The price for this service depends on the size and complexity of the data center; the base price starts at $10,000.

The Eco Optimization Kit walks customers through a battle plan to consolidate and/or refresh their server and storage hardware, stressing Sun's own energy-efficient hardware but is not limited to it.

A separate Eco Virtualization Kit provides Sun experts to show customers who to virtualize their environments to drive up utilization as part of a server and storage consolidation effort. Sun is obviously going to push Solaris 10 and its Solaris container and LDom partitions and ZFS file system hard as part of this service. But Sun knows that customers have preferences for lots of different kit.

"We are more than willing to take a purchase order for a whole new data center," said Hoy. "But the reality is, this is not what real customers do."

  • Source: [Computergram]

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