Data Center Leaders: Cost Efficient Storage Consolidation & Networking With Rajeev Bhardwaj From Cisco
Posted on June 16th, 2009 by Judie Van KeulenStorage Consolidation Expert Rajeev Bhardwaj
Behind labor, energy costs are emerging as the second highest operating cost in most data centers worldwide. Operating in an economy still in the early stages of recovery, companies must explore all options available for reducing data center energy costs.
Today’s entry in our Data Center Leaders Interview Series sets out to help companies make the critical IT decisions that will lower costs, including those associated with storage consolidation, without hindering performance.
For help, we turn to Rajeev Bhardwaj, Senior Director, Data Center Switching Technology Group, Cisco:
Evolving Solutions:
What do you recommend as a first step in the development of a cost efficient storage consolidation or networking plan?
Rajeev Bhardwaj:
End-to-end virtualization will consolidate the datacenter and will deliver operational efficiencies from the perspective of being cost-effective and applications being easier to manage, provision, and deploy. End-to-end virtualization in the datacenter includes server virtualization, server I/O virtualization, Storage Area Network (SAN) virtualization, and Storage virtualization.
End-to-end virtualization should begin with SAN virtualization as the SAN network interconnects all the storage and server elements in the datacenter and a consolidated SAN can serve as a platform for further virtualization of servers, server I/Os, and storage.
Customers typically deploy silo’ed infrastructure with multiple SAN islands based on departmental, application, and performance needs. The consolidated SAN must maintain the logical separation between the SAN Islands from both data path and control plane perspectives while consolidating them on a single, physical infrastructure: Virtual SAN (VSAN) allows to easily achieve that virtualization abstraction.
Consolidating multiple SAN islands in a virtualized SAN allows to significantly reducing the number of infrastructure assets required, being now shared and dynamically allocated based on actual needs.
This approach optimizes assets’ utilization and dramatically reduces deployment, management, as well as power, space and cooling costs. A consolidated SAN has the additional advantage that intelligence can now be deployed in the SAN to enable both server virtualization and storage virtualization.
Evolving Solutions:
What are the inherent dangers in trying to make your storage consolidation plan too cost efficient?
Rajeev Bhardwaj:
It is very important to consider the underlying architecture of each device required to deliver the consolidated SAN. If the SAN switch architecture is not robust and delivers unpredictable performance and latency, the consolidated SAN becomes a central bottleneck affecting all applications and all departments.
One should consider questions such as – how does the switch architecture handle congestion, does it exhibit consistent latency and performance, does it provide enough buffer-to-buffer credits per port to handle different applications and distances, does it provide high availability and in particular for links that carry a lot of bandwidth between switches?
Evolving Solutions:
Green IT is seen by many as a solution to upgrading existing data centers to be more cost efficient. Do you feel green IT practices can significantly impact the cost of storage consolidation?
Rajeev Bhardwaj:
A piecemeal approach of deciding each IT component based on its power consumption can work fine for marginally reducing power as a first step, but can actually be counter-productive overall if a holistic view of the data center power is not considered.
Solutions that at the chassis level seem to provide slightly better power consumption, have proven to increase the overall power cost of the datacenter: poor network support of server virtualization constraints the consolidation of servers, consuming over 75% of the overall datacenter power budget; limited networking capabilities and unpredictable performance require to increase network size as soon as new applications are deployed in the datacenter, transforming the initial minimal saving in a major cost.
Green IT can reduce cost and power usage while increasing operational efficiency in the data center if achieving end-to-end virtualization is maintained as a goal. Deploying the right networking infrastructure can provide security, performance, Quality of Service (QOS), and ease of management required to enable reductions in the size of the server farm, the number of LAN and SAN switches, and the number of storage arrays.
Evolving Solutions:
In a recent interview, author and StorageIO found Greg Schulz helped dispel the myth that storage networking and consolidation are business expenses that only apply to large enterprises. In your experience, are smaller businesses aware of the need for storage consolidation and networking plans?
Rajeev Bhardwaj:
In these tough economic times, smaller businesses are looking to reduce both capital and operational expenditure. Smaller businesses understand that times are tough but are also looking to position themselves for the turn-around in the economy and so are not willing to sacrifice on scalability.
IT is increasingly considered as a means to increase the company efficiency and competitiveness by providing real-time data to any sales person, partner, or executive anywhere at any time while maintaining security and keeping costs low.
Smaller businesses are very much interested in buying and maintaining fewer servers, fewer switches, and getting more mileage out of their existing storage arrays. Thus we see smaller companies collapsing their multiple fabric switches into a larger director to gain scalability and high availability while reducing management expenses.
Similarly, we have also seen keen interest in our Fibre Channel over Ethernet (FCoE) portfolio from smaller business looking to consolidate their LAN and SAN expertise and infrastructures.
Evolving Solutions:
Omar Sultan, your colleague from Cisco, envisioned matured virtualization, greater use of automation and the evolution of cloud computing as solutions that would lower data center costs five years from now. What would you add to this list?
Rajeev Bhardwaj:
Most organizations have separate LAN and SAN departments managing separate networks today. Five years from now I see this distinction being blurred and administrators who are aware of both LAN and SAN environments running a common network based on common switching components.
I see this common, cost-efficient network providing the under-pinning for higher data center virtualization, automation, and ultimately evolution of highly scalable, secure, and highly available private and public cloud infrastructures.
Evolving Solutions:
Wild Card: Anything else you would like to add?
Rajeev Bhardwaj:
Energy costs are emerging as the second highest operating cost (behind labor) in most of the data centers worldwide. While networks consume a very small percentage of the overall data center power, deployment of intelligent networks can drastically reduce end-to-end power consumption and management costs while reducing provisioning time for new applications and achieving greater operational efficiencies in the data center.
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