hp data center transformation for better business outcomes · hp data center transformation for...
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© 2007 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P.The information contained herein is subject to change without notice
HP Data Center Transformation for Better Business Outcomes
Spiros LiolisCGEIT, CISSP, CISA, CISM, ISSAP, BS7799 Lead Auditor
Senior Solution Architect, DCT and BC/DR
C&I EMEA, International Experts Team
2 20 Июнь, 2008 AA1-0356ENW
Topics- current trends of DC engineering- HP IT story- Mission Critical Facilities portfolio- references
Data Center Critical Forces 2015
Data Center Challenges • Power consumption is increasing – 4000-12000 w/m2 and 32kW per
rack• More heat to be absorbed by CRAC’s• Virtualization density is increasing • Usage of “clear” power is advantage for DC location• Utilize energy efficient equipment • Security “built-in” processes• “Lights-out” Datacenter and remote management• Linear scalability and flexibility• Over provisioning in power and cooling. Gas or
liquid cooling for CPU• From disk based to tape storage• Fire and theft prevention – VESDA• Current floor load 1000-1200 kg/m2
5
HP Story 2005Too many directions, not enough connections
IT 4+% of revenue
<50% of resources
time dedicated
to innovation
750+ data marts
100+ HP IT sites
in 53 countries ~4,000
Applications
85+ data centers in
29 countries
Under-managed network
>1,200 active IT projects
30% IT managed
by IT
~19,000 IT professionals
including contingent workforce
100% IT managed
by IT
6
HP Story 2007The right direction. The right connections.
~500 active Business
Projects at any given
time
90%HP
employees – 10% CWF
~1500Applications
Less than 30 HP IT core
collaborationsitesWW
% of Revenue
cut in half
80% of resources
time dedicated to innovation
Optimized,Cost
effective, & secure network
6 NGDCsIn 3
zones1 EDW
HP data center transformation forbetter business outcomes
HP Data Center Transformation
Decrease cost Mitigate risk Accelerate business growth
HP data center services
Data center facility
readiness
Data center transition
Data center operation
Data center continual
improvement
Facilities Network Storage Servers operation
Data Center Strategy
Data Center Design
Data Center Deployment & Transition
Data Center Operation
Data Center Continual Improvement
HP data center transformation strategy• Enable IT to be more nimble and provide better information • Provide more dependable, simplified operations• Enable faster delivery of new technologies, services, and
information• Accommodate growth • Provide for improved business continuity• Significantly reduce IT costs
HP data center transformation includes…
• Technology refresh• Standardized technology
environment• Retirement of legacy
applications • Next-generation data center
build out − State-of-the-art infrastructure for
today and tomorrow− Automated monitoring and control
• HP Dynamic Smart Cooling• Real business
continuity/disaster recovery
829 Miles
2600 Pinemeadow
Austin - Site 1
Houston AtlantaAustin
- Completed 11/06- 125KSF
150 Miles
717Miles
- Completed 06/07- Greenfield 50KSF
- Completed 06/06- 1700 server addition
- Completed 05/07- Greenfield 100KSF
- Completed 01/07- 50KSF raised floor
- Completed 07/07- Greenfield 50KSF
Global data centers
Data centers – detail locations
Houston - Site 3 Atlanta - Site 5
Houston - Site 4 Atlanta - Site 6Austin - Site 2
KSF = 1,000 square feet
Data center design• Modular design / standards
− Modules can be configured to fit site geometry and topology
− Cells will be configured to fit expansion, power and physical requirements
• Cost drivers / advantages− Physical area− Cooling− Power
• Power & cooling− Static Smart Cooling (SSC)− Dynamic Smart Cooling (DSC)
Modular Data Center – one module
Standard Physical Plant:•Tier III environmental and reliability standards
Standard Servers/storage• Two primary platforms
Staging/Storage
Distribution Rooms Network Vault fire detection/suppression
GeneratorsUPS’s
HVAC
fire detection/suppression
Network
PDU
IntegrityServers
Ntwk P
DU
Servers
ProLiant
Network
PDU
IntegrityServers
Ntwk P
DU
Servers
ProLiantPDU
Storage& Backup P
DU
Storage& Backup
Network
PDU
IntegrityServers
Ntwk P
DU
Servers
ProLiant
Expansion & Transformation
‘White Space’
GeneratorsUPS’s
HVAC
• Judicious provisioning of AC resources based on workload distribution
• Available energy savings of 25% over non-optimized layout [$1m p.a. for a 15MW data center @ $100/MWh]
• The Smart Cooling system is a combination of modeling, metrology & intelligent control
• Two key solutions:
Static Smart Cooling Based on measurement, evaluation & static solution
Dynamic Smart CoolingContinuous adaptive control of cooling
Smart Cooling – what is it ?
Data center business continuity and disaster recovery strategy
Zone A
Site – 1 Site – 2
Dark
Active Active
Dark
Active
Dark
Active
Dark
Active
Dark
Active
Dark
Zone B
Site – 3 Site – 4
Active
Dark
Active
Dark
Active
Dark
Active
Dark
Active
Dark
Active
Dark
Application
Tier 1
Tier 2
Tier 3
Business continuity
Disasterrecovery
Business continuityAvailability Reliability Expandability Agility
Next generation data centers Next generation data centers
Active
Active
Active
ActiveActive Active
Active Active
Active Active
• Faster application rollout
• Fewer sites
• Triple the bandwidth
• 50% lower networking cost
• Double the storage (all data replicated)
• Decreased storage cost
• 80% more processing power
• 30% fewer servers
HP data center transformationSimplified infrastructure delivers more
MoreLess ==
© 2008 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P.The information contained herein is subject to change without notice
The portfolio of
critical facilities services
Data center domains can no longer operate in isolation
CIO
Data center manager
Data center facilities manager Transform facilities
Improve data center operational efficiency
Enable competitive advantage
• What assets do I have or where my assets are located?• How are those assets performing to support business demand?• How can I improve infrastructure performance in my data
center operations?
• How can I modernize the facility to meet capacity growth?• How do I solve power, cooling, cabling and floor space issues?• How do I assure operational continuity of my facility?
• How can my data center meet the demand for business innovation and time-to-market?
• How do I show the value of data center technology to each business unit?
• What are the true costs of my data centers? How many do I need?
Critical Facilities Services
• Facility & technology assessment services
• Enterprise data center strategy
• Facility master planning• Facility consolidation and
migration planning
• Facility design, programming & cost modeling
• Energy efficiency design• Engineering infrastructure
design• Technology (cable plant)
infrastructure design
• Commissioning & testing• Operational & reliability
risk assessment• Facility operations
strategy• Failure & forensic analysis
Critical facilities consulting
Critical facilities design Critical facilities assurance
Critical Facilities ConsultingProvides high level strategic and tactical planning for data centers, and other highly redundant facilities.
• Helps ours clients decide how many data centers are needed for their enterprise strategy
• Where the centers should be located to allow for latency, accessibility, and other factors?
• What physical size and topology (level of redundancy) they should be built to (Tier 1-4)
• How to migrate their data to the new site(s)
• What will it cost (rough order of magnitude) to do all or pieces of the above
Critical Facilities DesignOffers innovative engineering design solutions for technology-intensive, high-performance facilities.
• Evaluates potential sites/locations and facilities to meet requirements defined by the enterprise strategy (as captured by a CFC engagement for example).
• Provides a basis of design, concepts and full design through stamped and sealed construction documents which are then delivered to a CM or GC (not EYPMCF) to construct the facility.
• Uses statistical tools and benchmarking to model reliability pre and post design
• Uses proprietary tools to provide more detailed cost estimates
• Provides engineering peer review of facilities designed by others
Critical Facilities AssuranceProvides guidance and testing programs to improve the operational functionality, efficiency and overall reliability of existing infrastructure.
• Performs start up testing (commissioning) post construction of the facility
• Provides consulting to optimize an existing facility's operational performance (key focus areas on energy efficiency, reliability, and cost reduction)
• Provides oversight in equipment vendor maintenance programs and streamlines the documentation process
Examples of work
Fannie Mae: 1st LEED certifieddata center
Data Center/Office Building/Operations Center (250,000 sf)
Scope:• MEP roles included a detailed
analysis and selection of green-field sites, programming, design development, construction documentation, construction administration & commissioning
• LEED certification
Total cost:• $130M Construction Cost
Schedule:• 6 Month design development• 22 months construction program
Follow-on activity:• Additional design, testing and
operational consulting projects.
HP Alpharetta, GA• Modular design services for a data
centre with two 25,000 sq.ft raised floor cells with an initial design at 100w/sf.
• The provision and major equipment capacity will upgrade to 200w/sf.
• This Tier III + design includes 2N UPS, N+1 generators and chillers.
• The dual utility service was designed for future additions and expansion to service a total of 40 MW capability data centre.
Confidential Fortune 500 Financial ClientGreenfield Data Center (240,000 sq. ft.)
Scope:
MEP design and construction support as well as full testing & commissioning
Total cost:
$110M Construction Cost
Schedule:
6 Month design effort
20 months of construction
South American Financial ClientTier IV Data Center & Command Center (75,000 sq.ft)
Scope:
MEP schematic design, construction support and full testing & commissioning.
Total cost:
$70M Construction Cost
Schedule:
24 months
Representative Client List• GlaxoSmithKline• Goldman Sachs • HSBC• Intel• Interxion• JP Morgan Chase• Lehman Brothers• Level 3• Morgan Stanley• Motability• National Australia Bank • Orange• Rack Space• RBS• Reuters
• Riverbed Technology Ltd• S G I • Schneider • Scottish Power • Sentrum• Skanska • Symantec • Telecity Redbus• T-Systems • UBS• Visa • Vodafone• Yahoo• Zen Internet
• AT&T• Avon• Bloomberg• BNP Paribas• BoA • British Gas • BT • CBRE • Citigroup• CommerzBank• Credit Suisse• Deutsche Bank• DrKW• EDF Energy• Experian • Future Energy Systems
Harrods (2 x DC) London, UK
HSBC Data Center Albany, NY
3i plc Data Centre (2x DC) Birmingham, London UK
Levi Strauss Data Center Northampton, UK
ABN Amro Data Centre London, UK
3i Europe Data Center (3 x DC) Paris, Milan, Boston
Egypt Cyber Centre Cairo, Egypt
Covance Clinical Data Center Crawley, UK
iaxis Data Centre Amsterdam, Netherlands
Colt Telecommunications (3 x DC) Poplar, City Road, Park Royal London, UK
Samsung SDSE Data Center New Jersey, USA
The Leasing Group Data Center Reading, UK
Kelloggs Data Centre (6 x DC) Manchester, Milan, Paris, Bremen, Brussels, Valls, Dublin
Samsung SDSE Data Center London, UK
Airbus UK Data Centre Bristol, UK
Shell (3 x DC) Sakhalin, Rio De Janeiro, Borneo
Saudi electricity Company (3 x DC) Riyahd, Jeddah, Dammam
UBS (3 x Data Centers) Geneva, Zurich, Switzerland
CPP London, UK
References
© 2008 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P.The information contained herein is subject to change without notice
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