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Revue de presse sur les tendances et évolutions technologiques utiles.
http://theitwatcher.fr/.
What exactly is Data Center Infrastructure
Management? Is DCIM truly a new idea or just a repackaging of the same
old methods?
The
cloud may be here, but it’s not omnipresent nor will it fit the needs
of every company. There is still a need for traditional in-house data
centers across many kinds of organizations. Even if your company does
use the cloud, you might have a hybrid configuration or at least a
network and electrical backbone in your facility, which warrants close
monitoring and inspection. Of course, you may be a cloud provider
yourself, with a supersized data center that warrants the best
management solution on the market!
Data Center
Infrastructure Management (DCIM) isn’t a brand new topic; it has been
around since at least 2009 and is steadily gaining momentum. 451 Research claimed in April of 2013 that “the growth rate of DCIM far outstrips that for the datacenter equipment industries and for the enterprise IT segment as a whole.”
It should be noted, however, that 451 also states DCIM is small by
comparison to other elements of enterprise software “such as IT service
management, ERP, databases or security.” Slashdot.com reported in June of 2013 that: “the
growth of cloud services and the datacenters that support [DCIM] could
leap from an estimated $450 million this year to $1.7 billion by 2016.” With this much growing potential in store, it’s worth looking at what DCIM can offer.
Of
course, just because something is deemed new doesn’t make it an
automatic benefit across the board - nor does it mean the trend or
product is really "new." Thin-client computing is considered by some as
merely a reboot of mainframe operations, which have been around for
decades. The Apple iPad, launched in 2010, was deemed the first tablet
by many who somehow overlooked Microsoft’s Tablet PC ten years earlier.
Malcolm Gladwell outlines the amazing transformation of Hush Puppies shoes from stodgy outdated footwear to reinvented fashion craze in his fascinating book, “The Tipping Point.”
We live in a society where things get rehashed and revisited and what’s
old becomes new again. With that in mind, is DCIM just another
re-telling of the same story, like the film “The Amazing Spider-Man” in
2012? In my view, the answer is no.
What is DCIM?
It’s
safe to say many IT professionals are familiar with traditional methods
of infrastructural monitoring such as downtime alerts, server component
and/or resource evaluation and network latency checks. Products such as
Nagios, WhatsUpGold, Dell IT Assist and Dell Management Console are
standard fare when it comes to keeping an eye on the health of your
physical systems, software, and environment. DCIM is this, but it’s also
more, much like replacing your breakdown-prone Ford Pinto with a
finely-tuned Cadillac convertible. It will still get you to the same
places but with wider range, power and capability to do new things (like
impress your neighbors!).
How is DCIM different?
Traditional
infrastructural monitoring has been largely about one piece of the
jigsaw puzzle, with many other pieces glaringly absent (or for which new
technologies showed a need that these products couldn’t fill). For
instance ,maybe you can tell your servers are up, but have no way of
knowing how many servers you can fit in your space and still safely
cool. DCIM fills in those gaps by introducing concepts such as:
Asset tracking
Change management
Analysis of virtual/logical systems and how they interact with physical hardware
Management of “utility” operations like electricity, heating and cooling from a usage, efficiency and cost savings perspectives
Maximizing system utilization for best efficiency
Consolidation of resources/locations
Optimizing physical infrastructure (including space management) to enable higher capacity
Multi-layered monitoring
Future planning via modeling scenarios
There
are plenty of existing software and/or products which handle some of
these areas, of course, but the goal of DCIM is to unify them within one
centralized point of administration so “the left hand knows what the
right is doing” – and so do all the other pieces of the puzzle.
What are some examples of DCIM in action?
As outlined in a scenario by Gary Bunyan at datacenterknowledge.com,
a company wants to gain insight into all of their assets including
technical (running programs) and financial (serial and asset numbers).
DCIM performs this function but, rather than dumping the asset
information into an Excel file where it gathers dust, it provides
contextual ongoing data about the assets and how they relate to one
another to help spot cost cutting opportunities, reduce risk, and better
manage the data center. Furthermore, issues such as the impact of the
asset on other assets. as well as on the business overall, can be
explored.
Emerson Network Powerdiscusses several scenarios of DCIM,
one of which involves providing data center technicians “the visibility
and control to optimize performance while maintaining or improving
availability. With this level of progression, data center management
becomes truly proactive as personnel can anticipate potential failures
and automatically shift compute and physical resources to eliminate
downtime while increasing resource utilization to optimize efficiency
across the data center.” Having users page you at 3 AM to report email
is down is so 2003.
Yevgeniy Sverdlik of www.datacenterdynamics.com
writes that DCIM can keep tabs on “all devices within the IT
infrastructure and ongoing health monitoring of each of them as well as
monitoring of things like energy consumption, temperature, humidity and
airflow. The software uses that data to create a digital model of the
infrastructure, updating it as changes occur. The model, ideally
presented in an accessible graphical format, is a key aspect of a DCIM
solution, as it visualizes interrelationships between devices in the
infrastructure. An analytical engine is what interprets the data the
solution collects to find problems or inefficiencies.” It’s no longer
enough to just monitor the data center to make sure it doesn’t get too
hot or check to see if someone left the door open.
Who are the vendors and what do they offer?
Some example vendors and their products are listed as follows:
It
should be pointed out this this is a field with some growing pains so a
magic solution is not a 100 percent universal guarantee. Kevin Fogarty,
the author of the Slashdot article referenced above, points out a report from Heavy Reading
which indicated vendors need to “adapt their products to manage virtual
as well as physical datacenter assets, while scaling their products to
accommodate the telco datacenters supporting public cloud services.”
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