Posts Tagged ‘data center’

Green Data Centers: Federal Government Insights Part 4

January 11th, 2010

previous post: Part 3 – Consolidation and Virtualization

Power Management

Power management is a really powerful way to decrease energy consumption. Ironically, power management tools are widely available and most often even now you have them in your data center, but they are not put to use. In some cases the reason for that is very simple – there are no internal rules to tell administrators when to turn power management on and administrators don’t want to take the risk to do it without formal authorization.

Properly administered power management can decrease power consumption by 20-25% or even more. Though it varies from one data center to the next, generally the load is much lower at night and at weekends and it is safe to turn power management on.

Some of the power management solutions that are built-in the operating system are good and even if you don’t have the budget to purchase dedicated power management systems, these built-in solutions are more than nothing. There is no doubt that dedicated, smart power management solutions are better but as a quick fix even built-in power management solution do a great job.

In addition to the operating system, hardware also has power management abilities. These power management abilities vary from one model to the next but generally for processors, motherboards, and monitors the presence of power management technology has already become a standard feature.  If your hardware has such features, you should definitely turn them on because this alone can cut your energy bill by 20-30% or more.

Energy Efficient Equipment

Power management is done best with energy efficient equipment. Today there is hardly a server or other data center equipment, which doesn’t include energy efficient parts. Usually it is CPUs, motherboards, SSD drives, and RAM that are designed to be energy efficient.

Energy efficient equipment might be more expensive to purchase but the cost savings it will generate in the long run will pay off. This is why you should always opt for energy efficient equipment when you buy new machinery or upgrade the existing machines.

High Efficiency Power Supplies

Power supplies are a special case of energy efficient equipment. A power supply might look like a secondary component because unlike CPUs or RAM it does no computational task but energy inefficient power supplies can waste more energy than any other part in the data center.

Power supplies are vital because they can waste almost 50% of the power. This means that your equipment gets only half of the energy because the rest is wasted by the power supply! But this is not all – in addition to wasting energy, power supplies need approximately the same amount of energy in order to be cooled. This way it turns out that a substantial part of the energy used in your data center goes for powering power supplies and cooling them!

In addition to low efficiency power supply, which wastes a substantial part of the energy, many servers run with 600-watt power, while they actually need only 300 watts. This is an additional energy leak and it should be one of the first points you must focus on when trying to make your data center a green one.

High efficiency power supply might cost a bit more than their traditional counterparts but the savings a high efficient power supply can generate for a year could be times its price. There is no need to say that cheap is more expensive, so don’t buy cheap power supplies, which are real energy monsters.

Cooling

Powering the equipment is only half of all the costs for energy in a typical data center. Cooling is another major expense because all the equipment generates a lot of heat and this heat must be dealt with. Air conditioning and other cooling devices also consume electricity, thus contributing to your energy bill.

Cooling expenses can be decreased in many ways. For instance, if you choose your location in an area where there is natural cooling (i.e. a colder place), this can help to reduce the cooling expenses.

The hot aisle/cold aisle concept is also a step in the direction of a greener data center. This concept means that you arrange computers in such a way that the rears of one row of computers face the rears of the adjacent row. Heat is ventilated through the rear of computers and this is where you cool more. The front of computers doesn’t generate heat and as a result demands less cooling.

last post: Conclusions

Green Data Centers: Federal Government Insights Part 3

January 11th, 2010

previous post: Part 2 – How to Make Your Data Center Green

Consolidation

One of the first steps you need to take in order to make your data center greener is to consolidate. In a typical data center it is not an exception to see servers, which are running at 10% to 15% utilization. 100% utilization (if possible at all) is risky, especially in the long run and you can’t afford to utilize your machines that much but if you consolidate two, three, or more machines into one, this immediately translates into two, three or more times less energy to power and cool them.

In addition to heavily under-utilized servers, there are also idle servers. Idle servers don’t perform any useful job but they still consume energy.  Idle servers could constitute up to 30% of all servers and if there is no way to monitor them and turn them off when they are not in use, this drastically increases your energy bill.

If an idle server is a more recent one, chances are that it uses some sort of power management, which means that its energy consumption is lower but still even with the best power management solutions, an idle server can consume up to 30-35% of the energy it needs when fully utilized.

Consolidating idle and under-utilized servers might not look like a big deal. However, when you have in mind that each server costs at least $500-600 a year in terms of electricity, and you have hundreds of servers, the savings you can achieve by reducing the number of running servers is considerable. What is more, this consolidation will in no way impact your operations negatively, so the dilemma is not whether you pay to have the job done or save money but the dilemma is if you want to pay when no job is done or not.

Virtualization

Virtualization is one of the technologies, which can make the most for the success of your green efforts. Virtualization allows to consolidate multiple logical servers or storage devices into one physical unit and is by far the most efficient consolidation technique.

Virtualization requires special software, which as a rule is not free. VMWare is the leading provider of virtualization solutions for data centers and its products are designed with energy efficiency in mind. In addition to VMWare’s products, there are many other free and paid virtualization products and if your budget can’t provide for a paid virtualization solution, you could consider some of the free, open source ones.

Virtualization is becoming a de facto standard for a data centers and there are hardly many data centers where no virtualization solution is implemented. Of course, this doesn’t mean that virtualization is a panacea because it does introduce some problems (for instance there are applications, which require a dedicated machine and misbehave when virtualized) but generally virtualization is one of the major approaches to a greener data center.

Next: Part 4 – Power and Cooling

Green Data Centers: Federal Government Insights Part 2

January 11th, 2010

How to Make Your Data Center Green

previous: part 1 – Introduction and Why Go Green

Achieving a greener data center is hardly a task you can do overnight but each step in the right direction counts.  Some of the steps towards a greener data center require investment (i.e. the purchase of new, energy efficient equipment, or virtualization licenses) and generally these steps require planning in advance and a substantial timeframe to implement them but most of the other steps are relatively easy to do and require no to little investment.

However, the most important is that going green starts with the commitment to it. If you and your employees are not conscious that green is better, no high-end equipment and no force on earth will make your data center greener. Going greener should be the result of a conscious effort, not the result of a forced decision or imitation (everybody else does it, so I must do it as well).

Some of the steps in the greener direction are one-time steps (i.e. purchasing of new energy-efficient equipment), while others are ongoing tasks (i.e. power management). In some cases it makes sense to modify internal data center rules and regulations and to include provisions for green operations. For instance, it makes sense to have formal rules as to why should power management be turned on/off, so that data center employees don’t have to make guesses.

next: Part 3 – Green Data Center Consolidation and Virtualization