The Road To A Smart Data Centre: Tanuj Khandelwal Jan 27, 2014
The Road To A Smart Data Centre: Tanuj Khandelwal Jan 27, 2014
Historically, all data center owners/operators have benchmarked the efficiency of their data centers
using power usage effectiveness (PUE) and data center infrastructure efficiency (DCiE). This
approach has led to the well-known PUE wars. The Green Grid, author of both PUE and DCiE,
didnt intend for these metrics to be used for the purpose of comparing one data center with another.
Unfortunately data center operators continue publishing PUE numbers in an attempt to market their
facilities or design strategies. Although efforts to improve data center efficiency should be celebrated
and publicized, it is important to understand that these metrics by themselves are inadequate in
determining data center efficiency, they are only the beginning. The data center efficiency metrics
must include productivity. Are you getting the most bang for the buck from your servers and
storage? Are you maximizing processing power? Are you retiring idle servers? Are you consolidating
and virtualizing? Are you using renewable energy as opposed to conventional energy sources? Are
you using wasted energy in a productive manner? A new approach should be adopted to look beyond
PUE and avoid missing out on the opportunity to manage other major aspects of power consumption
if we truly want to compare one data centers design and operations with those of another.
Several technical papers have provided estimates and actual measured PUE numbers for data
centers. In its report to Congress, the U.S. EPA provided a set of efficiency-improvement scenarios
that predicted future data center energy consumption and associated PUE values to 2011. The EPA
listed four categories of data center efficiency improvements, with increasing cost and complexity,
summarized in Table 1.
Detailed
Center Model
Data
The above data center model can be expanded to include other factors such as environment, use of
natural energy, recovery of wasted energy and so on. In this model, the total load is divided into IT
equipment such as servers, facility load such as air-conditioning/power-supply systems and operation
for each type. Electricity is sorted into grid power and green power generated in the data center. New
data center construction would use photovoltaic (PV) panels mounted on the roof, whereas existing
data centers can use thin-film technology should their existing roof construction be unable to handle
the stress and weight of PV panels and associated framework.
The useful work produced has been proposed as the product of the sum of all tasks, the value of the
tasks, a time-based utility function and the absolute time of completion. The mantra of data center
gurus at the moment is right-sizing; calculating DCeP allows users to right-size virtual and physical
infrastructures to support business needs.
This metric, however, is difficult to implement, especially for colocated data centers. Measuring the
productivity from each lessee would be tedious and, in certain cases, impossible. DCeP excludes
factors that take into account various energy-saving strategies and will thus be insufficient.
Expanding on the research done by the Environment Department at the Japan Information
Technology Service Industry Association (JISA), we can define a better metric that not only includes
majority of the energy saving strategies but also provides sub-metrics to gain an overall green data
center title. These sub-metrics focus on personnel and equipment safety, data center efficiency, and
sustainability or reliability.
Its no secret that data centers are power hogs. Too many are using more power to cool the facility
than to operate the computers that live there. Creating a one-line diagram of the data center is the
first step towards measuring and managing overhead power demands. A one-line diagram allows
centralization of a system knowledge database, which includes parameters of the electrical
components that will help determine the electrical behavior by creating different scenarios. Creating
numerous combinations of networks having diverse configurations and varying engineering properties
allows users to fully investigate and study the behavior and characteristics of the electrical networks
using one database. A series of what if scenarios can be designed, allowing the engineer to predict
any future behavior of the power system.
The monitoring system should be configured to allow the operator to replay previously recorded
message logs while controlling playback to rerun at original or accelerated speeds. The ability to
recover from a system disturbance depends on the time it takes to establish the cause of the problem
and take remedial action. This requires a fast and complete review and analysis of the sequence of
events before the disturbance.
Power-management software should assist your operation and engineering staff to quickly identify the
cause of operating problems and determine where energy costs can be reduced. Besides reducing
losses and improving data-gathering capability, such an application should assist in increased plant
reliability and controlled costs. An event-playback feature is especially useful for root cause and effect
investigations, improvement of system operations, exploration of alternative actions, and replay of
what if scenarios.
To obtain optimal results, create a trend of the monitored and archived data and predict future results.
An estimate can be obtained using the nameplate data and results from the original design of the oneline diagram, but this approach will lead to overestimation because the nameplate data represents the
power that can be produced, not the actual power required to supply the servers. With the missioncritical facility online, monitor the active power levels and energy consumption while tracking costs.
Also, create a report that displays the PUE and DCiE, thus providing a method to determine
operational efficiency and allowing you to view the effectiveness of new energy-saving projects.
Conclusion
A power-management solution can enable optimization of power usage and energy savings while
maintaining high availability and reliability. Optimizing power usage can reduce total cost of ownership
(TCO) and ensure a profitable life cycle for a mission-critical facility. Extending the power-monitoring
system by equipping it with an appropriate electrical-system context, simulation modules and
playback routines will give IT personnel a powerful new set of tools. Finally, all of these capabilities
should be included in one application that gives you the flexibility and compatibility to expand and
upgrade your power-management system as your needs change