Enterprises are often challenged by the complexity and fixed nature of their aging data centers. We commonly see the lack of performance capacity necessary to handle the goals of advanced “Industry 4.0” application scenarios and reduced energy consumption. To address these challenges, organizations are increasingly moving to intelligent data center solutions that deliver the agility, reliability, and efficiency that support the rapid service deployment needed to compete and win in this new era.
Challenges of Legacy Data Centers
Legacy data centers typically lack the operational reliability achieved by the current generation of equipment, and as a result have generally depended on redundant systems for stability. In addition, the complexity of managing data center growth has increased in response to new business demands. Issues include:
Example:Tencent, China’s largest Internet service portal, required over 400 days to gain the first 100 million users for its WeChat instant messaging application. It only took an additional 86 days to achieve its 500 millionth user.
Example: The 2013 Uptime Institute annual data center industry survey documented thatthe annual average Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE) of legacy data centers is about 1.8 — and on the order of 50 percent of the energy used creates no discernible business value. Globally, annual data center power consumption has reached 300 billion kWh — approximately 2 percent of the world’s total electrical use — and is the source of emission for 299 million tons of carbon.
Example:Alibaba Group earned USD 9.3 billion in sales revenue during last year’s annual Double-Eleven Crazy Shopping Festival. The transaction rate through Alibaba’s eCommerce platform averaged USD 6.5 million per minute.
Architectural Simplicity and Ease of Use
Building, data center infrastructure, and IT management systems are all operated independently in traditional data centers. Huawei’s Intelligent Data Center platforms are based on a unified management console able to address independently functional modules for meeting a wide variety of business requirements with flexible configurations. Built to be simple and scalable, our current generation of data centers accommodate rapid changes in customer demand. Building complete data centers now takes just weeks, instead of the months and years that had been required by traditional data centers.
Optimizing Efficiency in Future Data Centers
Huawei’s Intelligent Data Center energy-management modules are driven by sensor data captured at key nodes. The result is an optimized energy consumption profile for all systems and devices:
Example: With these new features, the annual average PUE of an Intelligent Data Center based in Hannover would be reduced to 1.42 — prior to accounting for free cooling. This means that a legacy data center with a PUE of 1.8 would save USD 1.66 million per year (at USD 10 cents per kWh) for a 10 MW-capacity data center at 50 percent load.
Reliability Solutions
According to the Uptime Institute’s Abnormal Incident Reporting (AIR) database, human error accounts for 70 percent of unplanned data center downtime. These failures can be avoided by using the automated policy management resources included in a modern data center solution. Intelligent Data Center minimize the risk of operational failure with:
The use of distributed sensors throughout modern Intelligent Data Centers provide an effective new means for collecting and analyzing raw data for use by Operations and Maintenance (O&M) staff. The sensors not only provide accurate, reliable data, but also free technical personnel to focus on supporting core business activities rather than chasing old problems.
Intelligent Data Centers for the Industry 4.0 Era
Data centers of the future will incorporate large sensor networks to monitor the environment and ensure operational continuity and energy efficiency, while Big Data analytics for performance monitoring will enable fast and accurate forecasting of data center issues. The goal in all cases is to enable IT staff priorities to focus on staying ahead of persistent problems and to better plan for long-term sustained operations.
Through these intelligent, automatic and self-managed data centers, organizations have new powers to create and deliver IT services with the speed, reliability, and efficiency demanded by their customers.