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AC/DC – 80s Rock Band or Data Center Power Distribution Terminology?

Posted by DELL-David H... |  Posted in Inside Enterprise IT |  Posted on 8 Oct 2009
Good question but since you’re reading this on Dell’s CIO-focused blog and not Creem , you should assume it is the latter. This is a topic that's been widely discussed across our industry, including this article from Jeff Burt of eWeek ...more>

Good question but since you’re reading this on Dell’s CIO-focused blog and not Creem, you should assume it is the latter. This is a topic that's been widely discussed across our industry, including this article from Jeff Burt of eWeek.

Grid designs for data center power grid infrastructures need to include careful consideration of uptime and efficiency. Current flow needs to be steady and always available. It should also be cost-effective and “green.”  The most fundamental consideration to be made when planning a new data center is whether to provision it with AC or DC power.  The majority of IT data centers today use  AC power throughout. This is not surprising, given the prevalence of AC power grid infrastructure in centers of global commerce.  A century of AC power grid refinements (i.e. transformers, circuit breakers, fuses, standards) have resulted in a generally accepted view of AC power as dependable. Couple that with these limitations imposed by the perception of DC power grid selection (distances of less than one mile and fewer available hardware choices) and you might conclude that DC power type data centers are rare. This is not true.

There remain a large number of DC powered data centers throughout the world, and new ones continue to be built, driven by telecommunication service expansion across emerging regions. DC power holds advantages for telecommunication networks that relate to always-on “dial tone” service level requirements. Network data flow for audio streaming is circuit-based, rather than packet-based. Slight disruption in sequential read/writes results in a poor user experience. Until recently, 1993 to be exact, AC power was susceptible to a bad thing called “current harmonics,” which can result in overheated neutral circuits and transformers. 

For these reasons, telecommunication companies embraced DC power early in their history of operations. DC power continues to be preferred for telecom networks due to the massive install base already in use, and DC power’s success in delivering incredible “dial tone” service levels -- “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it,” you might say.

Some other verticals for which DC power is attractive include:  remote and mobile computing (oil rigs, ships, jets), military, and video-content providers. The debate goes on, about the virtues of AC vs. DC power and while the efficiency rating between the two standards has come close to parity over the years, Dell remains a strong advocate of choice in the OEM market. This is why we have chosen to partner with NEI to introduce the NEI E2710, a DC-powered server that meshes with Dell’s DMC systems management console and packs the same performance punch that Dell’s Nehalem-based PowerEdge servers do.

The past few years have seen dramatic enhancements in the efficiency of IT equipment, which has resulted in impressive efficiency gains for AC power equipped servers and storage.  Power supplies now run at 80 percent and higher efficiency levels.  Airflow and cooling design considerations have pushed out bulky component cables, in favor of skinny ones.  Heat dissipation from components inside a  chassis is now carefully considered when product design teams develop new platforms.  Airflow is paramount, low “drag coefficients” enable fans to cool heat producing components with ease.  The fans themselves have been completely redesigned, and are more power efficient themselves.  In some large scale processor intense deployment, servers are “running naked” sans chassis, further eliminating drag coefficients while nestled inside their 19 inch-wide, 42U high racks.  As a result, the power efficiency possible in today’s AC powered data center environments is excellent.  This is fantastic news, both for companies with AC powered data centers and for everyone. 

Now, you have a DC powered server that takes advantage of all of these recent enhancements, and delivers Dell dependability and power.  Use it wisely.

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Breaking the I/O Virtualization Bottleneck

Posted by DELL-Matt M |  Posted in Inside Enterprise IT |  Posted on 22 Sep 2009
Virtualization has helped improve hardware utilization tremendously, but its full potential has not yet been realized. Virtualization technologies all share and virtualize a single physical port of the network adapter through software for the I/O needs ...more>

Virtualization has helped improve hardware utilization tremendously, but its full potential has not yet been realized. Virtualization technologies all share and virtualize a single physical port of the network adapter through software for the I/O needs of the virtual machines. All of that software battles to make I/O decisions for the virtual machines, which causes traffic jams, which slow the I/O performance and limit the number of virtual machines a physical server can run.

To address this issue, PCI-SIG, the special interest group that owns and manages PCI specifications as open industry standards, introduced a suite of specifications for Single Root I/O Virtualization (SR-IOV) specifications to allow multiple operating systems to share a physical interconnect.

Now Dell, Intel and Citrix are putting the PCI-SIG specs into action and will be demonstrating SR-IOV technology at the Intel Developers Forum 2009. IDF attendees can check out the showcase at exhibit booth #711 and hear all the technical brilliance straight from Dell, Intel and Citrix experts.

Here is the gist of how it works. SR-IOV allows hardware implementation of virtual network interface cards (NICs) or virtual functions without software emulation. In this way, a single I/O hardware is subdivided logically to appear as up to 256 virtual NICs and each virtual function is assigned independently and directly to a virtual machine, bypassing the software bottlenecks in the hypervisor to achieve near native performance. It also provides precise per-VM control for the connection speed and QoS. This specific demo uses Intel VT-d and Intel® 82599 10 Gigabit Ethernet device and allows multiple virtual machines (VMs) running on Citrix XenServer on Dell PowerEdge R710 with Intel® Xeon® processor 5500 to directly share I/O devices.

SR-IOV holds great promise. It improves data throughput and increase performance, efficiency, and scalability with high performance I/O devices, while preserving flexibility and mobility with live migration support. In preliminary lab tests with Dell, Intel and Citrix, this technology reduces processor utilization, Increases bandwidth to virtual machines and improves data transfer rates across the network.

Another benefit is that SR-IOV can save reduce capital expenditure as it doesn’t require special network infrastructure. It works with existing standard 10GE Ethernet switches on existing network infrastructures. Some other virtualization solutions rely on proprietary technologies requiring rip-and-replace upgrades to networks to get the benefits of I/O virtualization. SR-IOV technology further cuts hardware costs by reducing the number of physical network cards, and switch ports, as well as cabling for even more consolidation in a virtualized environment.

Rich Hernandez, PG Development Engineer Strategist in Dell Server Advanced Engineering Group has been working on this technology. Here he is with a brief overview:

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Cloud Tamer: Right Scale’s CEO Michael Crandell

Posted by DELL-Barton.... |  Posted in Inside Enterprise IT |  Posted on 16 Sep 2009
I’m getting down to the end of the videos I recorded last month at Cloud World/Open Source World and I’ve saved some of the best for last. My penultimate interview is with Michael Crandell, CEO of Right Scale . Right Scale, based in sunny ...more>

I’m getting down to the end of the videos I recorded last month at Cloud World/Open Source World and I’ve saved some of the best for last.  My penultimate interview is with Michael Crandell, CEO of Right Scale.

Right Scale, based in sunny Santa Barbara California, makes a cloud management platform that provides greater control over the cloud and makes it easy for companies to begin to migrate applications to the cloud or start building new ones there.  See what Michael has to say…

 


Some of the stuff Michael discusses:

  • Right Scale focuses on three things: 1) Automation, 2) Providing a library of cloud ready solutions, 3) doing all this in an open and transparent way that allows portability among cloud platforms.
  • How Right Scale came to be.  Their founder was teaching a class at UCSB about how to build an ecommerce site.  Amazon granted him some free compute time to use in his class.  He realized he needed a framework for managing and monitoring the classes usage, he also realized there was a business to built around this idea…
  • Where Right Scale will be putting its efforts in the up coming year:
    • Supporting more cloud platforms as the come online
    • Increasing their partner program and their cloud-ready solutions
    • Increasing support for enterprise level editions and features e.g. security and compliance, user control, billing, metering…

Extra-Credit reading:

Pau for now…

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Reliable Power to Protect Your Precious Data

Posted by DELL-Matt M |  Posted in Inside Enterprise IT |  Posted on 9 Sep 2009
There is a tree twisting thunderstorm raging outside and you know enough to grab a flashlight and candle just in case the power goes out. What’s the worst thing that could happen? You miss a rerun episode of Mad Men? Ah, but wait, isn’t the ...more>

There is a tree twisting thunderstorm raging outside and you know enough to grab a flashlight and candle just in case the power goes out. What’s the worst thing that could happen? You miss a rerun episode of Mad Men? Ah, but wait, isn’t the online sale is still going on at work through mid-night? Oh crud, what if the servers go down? Will you lose all the credit card transactions in process?

There is no need to sweat a power outage when your servers and storage are backed up with an uninterruptible power supply (UPS). You’re in luck. Today Dell unveiled 28 new UPS products with a whopping efficiency rating of 95% or more to keep your systems running. The UPS products come in a variety of wattages in either tower or rack-mount form to give you reliable, vital power backup for your IT equipment to protect your precious data.

Dell UPS systems come with LCD screens for instant status and monitoring of the full power load of a rack and even your entire network by glancing at the Dell UPS display. But what good is that when you’re kicking back at home? Not to worry, they have management software for remote management and monitoring through Web browsers. The Dell UPS will also send you an alarm notification and status reports through e-mail or a text to your mobile phones. They also will perform a graceful, unattended operating system shutdown if there is an extended power outage. Now relax and get back to watching Mad Men.

I had a chance to talk with William Muscato, product manager for the Dell Data Center Infrastructure team, about the new line-up of Dell UPS products. Here is what he had to say about how Dell has thoughtfully included features to simplify the selection, deployment, and monitoring of power backup and distribution.

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The Impact of Customers on Dell's OEM Business and Appliances

Posted by DELL-Bruce E... |  Posted in Inside Enterprise IT |  Posted on 31 Aug 2009
In this interview, Dell's Franklin Flint describes how a customer works with Dell's OEM group , even influencing the design of Dell-branded products for use in their hardware appliances. Using the Google Search Appliance as an example, Franklin ...more>

In this interview, Dell's Franklin Flint describes how a customer works with Dell's OEM group, even influencing the design of Dell-branded products for use in their hardware appliances.

Using the Google Search Appliance as an example, Franklin describes how the PowerEdge R710 server includes more network interface cards (NICs), better customization of the LCD display panel, internal flash memory capabilities and other features that make it OEM friendly, or an "appliance-inspired" server platform.

Have a listen:

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