DCIM and how it helps deliver the InteropNet Paul Goodison CEO, Cormant Inc. 1 855 CORMANT pgoodiso@cormant.com
Agenda The Current Data Center Management Paradigm What is DCIM? DCIM Adoption in an Enterprise Environment How the InteropNet Benefits From DCIM
Current Data Center Management Paradigm
The Data Center Divide Facilities - Suppliers Supplies Power Supplies Cooling Supplies Space Limited visibility of facility information to IT IT - Consumer Consumes Power Requires Cooling Uses Space Limited feedback of deployment plans to facilities Limited interest in facility data Shared pressure to collaborate to deliver more with the existing infrastructure
Data Center Challenges As data centers fill up finding available capacity is not an easy task Multiple groups, Multiple variables, Poor records Increased power and heat density Need to protect the data center from overload Data center consolidation Modern network equipment and servers are more demanding of resources Virtualization and cloud computing Increased reliance on critical IT systems Green IT initiatives
Data Center Challenges Enforcing processes, managing change The cost of power is on par with the cost of the equipment. 1 28% of companies do not know the exact number of servers in the data center 2 Complying with internal/external audits 1. Gartner Jan 12, 2. Quorcirca
Excel Misery! Multiple spreadsheets, one per department It takes multiple groups with multiple spreadsheets to plan a single deployment XL records on a network share Which copy is the latest? they both are Doing the same work again and again Lots of unlinked information in multiple files Local scripts to move data around. Local databases to solve a part of the challenge
Data Center Needs Planning A tool everyone can use to build consensus Constraints Working within limitations whatever they maybe Forward planning Predicting and visualizing the future Power and Equipment relationship and hierarchy Balancing the load and understanding the risks Getting the most out of the data center, maximizing capital and operating expenditure Whatever you are doing good data is vital
What is Data Center Infrastructure Management? (DCIM)
The Data Center Infrastructure Halls Racks Network Equipment Structured Cabling VLANs Power to the rack UPS Generators CRAC / HVAC High Voltage Power
The Data Center Infrastructure Halls Racks Network Equipment Structured Cabling VLANs Power to the rack UPS Generators Infrastructure in red usually managed by a BMS CRAC / HVAC High Voltage Power
DCIM: The Data Center Infrastructure Halls Racks Network Equipment Structured Cabling VLANs Power to the rack UPS Generators CRAC / HVAC High Voltage Power Servers Data Storage MDF/IDF rooms Store/Staging rooms Other equipment
Definitions DCIM is defined by Gartner as The integration of information technology(it) and facility management disciplines to centralize monitoring, management and intelligent capacity planning of a data center s critical systems. Achieved through the implementation of specialized software, hardware and sensors, DCIM will enable a common, real-time monitoring and management platform for all interdependent systems across IT and facility infrastructures.
Definitions DCIM is defined by another analyst firm as: The integrated management of the physical facilities, power and cooling elements of the data center using tools characterizes as data center infrastructure management (DCIM) solutions.
Our Definition How DCIM defined is driven more by your data center pain than a single definition, such a broad term as DCIM may never have one defined definition. DCIM will likely encompass some or all of the infrastructure, assets and connectivity around the data center and will provide a consolidated view of the physical and queried data and assure data maintenance. It should enable facilities and IT to plan together. DCIM is the buzz word de jour.
DCIM Consolidating existing spreadsheets and paper records Data silos Getting all of IT (and facilities) to talk to each other Managing just the data you want to Centralized standard reporting Providing a platform for enhanced management in the future
DCIM Adoption in an Enterprise Environment
Where to Start? List the top pain points in the data center Engage with the facilities teams and discuss pain points between the groups Look ahead, what areas may become issues in the future Equipment refresh Power Data center move Consolidation, virtualization Mergers and acquisitions Green initiatives Think across the enterprise
Scope Be realistic Cross function agreement is hard Let s manage everything, may not be realistic or even desired. Just enough management Look at TCO will you see a (realistic) return? Be very very clear on the post implementation process and document it at the start
DCIM Deployment Use the post implementation process to drive deployment How will the infrastructure be maintained Data output Set-up global configuration information at the start Use outside help to get going Most people too busy with the day to day Import existing data and then use mobility to confirm it
DCIM Pitfalls Too broad a scope Collecting data that is of no use Expecting DCIM to be a silver bullet Spending too much
Benefits? Asset & Infrastructure recovery and budget planning Visibility & Management of assets ensures targeted cost effective change Increased uptime Operational improvements, mitigate risk Labour and time saving for administering network changes Accurate information speeds moves, adds and changes Power saving Targeted upgrades (5MW DC, 20% saving = US$ 800k per year) ROI usually 6-12 months
How the InteropNet benefits from Cormant s CableSolve DCIM Solution (to deliver the worlds largest, most advanced, temporary network)
Documenting the InteropNet The key challenge of documenting and InteropNet infrastructure is the geographic scale of the network and the speed at which it is put together. Size - 260,000 sq. ft. show floor, 350,000 sq. ft. off show floor 3 co-location facilities in San Jose, Denver, New York Around 2,000 IT assets and 18,000 connections, including 40 Wi-Fi access points and over 120,000 attributes of information 6 days to deploy the Las Vegas network
The InteropNet DCIM Process
Initial Planning and Configuration Understanding the project scope What do the InteropNet team leads want from CableSolve Build and configure the solution Equipment types (chassis, cards, devices, UPS, etc.) Attributes (power, RU, capacities, status) Confirm basic infrastructure
Pre-site Build-out and Design CableSolve DCIM use starts four weeks before physical set-up CableSolve used to logically plan infrastructure Building the racks logically finds errors before build out Ensures dense racks are optimally organized Confirms port and power capacity
Interop Hot Stage Implement the design Confirm racking, manage change. Connectivity recording Power, Data cables - Copper & Fiber Confirming the design and recording discrepancies with mobile handheld computers using barcode/rfid scanners Device query for environmental data Rack, Power, Inventory, Connectivity reports Asset inventory tracking
Interop Las Vegas Core equipment deployed and re-connected quickly using records from Hot Stage and mobility Connectivity to show floor delivered with JDSU and Cormant paperless process All asset location and connectivity recorded Environmental data tracked, including power, temperature, UPS health. Used extensively by team lead for troubleshooting and status updates At show end, data used for accurate, rapid recovery of equipment.
InteropNet DCIM Mobility To document the infrastructure we relied heavily on mobile devices. These allowed the NOC team to document as change was made. Barcodes were used to make identification instant. Now that the InteropNet is live CableSolve is being used to trace equipment and paths of connectivity. Used to confirm asset recovery at the end of the show.
Physical Layer enhanced with Logical Layer Physical layer information is supplemented with queried information. This may include VM locations, power, temp and OOB server data. Physical and network information together ensures single window access to all devices
InteropNet Delivery Our third show. We have seen it go from being managed with multiple spreadsheets to none. Web and desktop clients used by majority of InteropNet volunteers Mobility used by all Paperless, documented delivery impossible without mobility
Interop Benefits Pre-planning saves time and speeds deployment of equipment Initial equipment deployment, connectivity and asset records means planning for Las Vegas driven by data, not assumptions Exact rack inventory and connectivity data reported Assets to Vegas known Mobility used to record as change is made, including equipment inventories, no lag in information Working with JDSU, the booth network deployment is now a 1 pass, paperless process Mobility critical to achieving this Full asset inventory, stops lost equipment Network queries tracks power, temperature, UPS health and confirming switch port connectivity.
Thank you Learn More at Booth 2526 www.cormant.com/interopnet-video or Attend Deploying and Managing a Paperless Infrastructure, May 10 th @ 10:15 AM Paul Goodison CEO, Cormant Inc. pgoodiso@cormant.biz Tel: +1 805 776 3476