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The data center is the center of the IT universe. It is the primary source for computing cycles, storage capacity, business applications, and information of all forms. This central positioning also causes the data center to be a target - for budget overruns, user blame, power shortages, security breaches, and worst of all, business shortfalls. Learn how to ensure your data center delivers on its business promise and makes the most cost-effective and efficient use of data center resources - from networks to servers to storage to power.
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© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco RestrictedDC3LaunchMsg/os 1
Data Center 3.0 Infrastructure Transformation
Douglas Gourlay
Senior Director, Data Center Solutions
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 2
Operational
Limitations
Data Centers Are Under Increasing Pressure
New Business Pressures
Collaboration SLA MetricsEmpowered User Global Availability Reg. Compliance
Power & Cooling ProvisioningAsset Utilization Security Threats Bus. Continuance
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 3
Data Center Evolution
Mainframe
Data Center 1.0
IT Relevance and Control
Application Architecture Evolution
Centralized
Data Center 2.0
Client-Server and
Distributed Computing
Decentralized
Data Center 3.0
Service Oriented and
Web 2.0 Based
Virtualized
Consolidate
Virtualize
Automate
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialMoran 2-07 4
Using What We Pay For
Power
Processing
0% 100%
100%
Space
0% 0%
100%
Data
Center 1.0
Economics
Data Center 2.0 Economics
Data Center 3.0 Economics
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialMoran 2-07 5
LAN SANAppl’nDeliverySecurity
Data Center Virtualization via the Network
StorageServers
NAS/File
Client
Web, Apps
Blades
Service Orchestration
Disk and Tape
End-to-End Service Provisioning
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialMoran 2-07 6
Processing Evolution
90Mhz - 1994
1Ghz - 2000
3.8Ghz - 2004
Dual-Core 2005
Quad 2007
Octal 2008/9
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialMoran 2-07 7
Core Width as a Virtualization Driver
Dual-Core 2005
Quad 2007
Octal 2008/9
3.8Ghz - 2004
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialMoran 2-07 8
Core Width as a Virtualization Driver
Dual-Core 2005
Quad 2007
Octal 2008/9
3.8Ghz - 2004
The shift to Octal-Core CPUs will drive Server Virtualization
9
Virtualization Drives Network Bandwidth
OS+AppOS+App OS+AppOS+App OS+AppOS+App OS+AppOS+App OS+AppOS+App
Server
200-500Mb/s
Server
200-500Mb/s
Server
200-500Mb/s
Server
200-500Mb/s
Server
200-500Mb/s
HypervisorHypervisor HypervisorHypervisor HypervisorHypervisor HypervisorHypervisor HypervisorHypervisor
10
Virtualization Drives Network Bandwidth
OS+AppOS+App OS+AppOS+App OS+AppOS+App OS+AppOS+App OS+AppOS+App
Server
200-500Mb/s
Server
200-500Mb/s
Server
200-500Mb/s
Server
200-500Mb/s
Server
200-500Mb/s
HypervisorHypervisor HypervisorHypervisor HypervisorHypervisor HypervisorHypervisor HypervisorHypervisor
11
Virtualization Drives Network Bandwidth
OS+AppOS+App
Server
2-5Gb/s
HypervisorHypervisor
OS+AppOS+App
OS+AppOS+App
OS+AppOS+App
OS+AppOS+App
OS+AppOS+App
OS+AppOS+App
OS+AppOS+App
OS+AppOS+App
OS+AppOS+App
12
Virtualization Drives Network Bandwidth
OS+AppOS+App
Server
2-5Gb/s
HypervisorHypervisor
OS+AppOS+App
OS+AppOS+App
OS+AppOS+App
OS+AppOS+App
OS+AppOS+App
OS+AppOS+App
OS+AppOS+App
OS+AppOS+App
OS+AppOS+App
13
IT Financial Evolution
•IT Consolidated Data Centers
•IT got billed for the power
•IT owns the physical asset
•IT owns the depreciation of the asset
•SaaS/ITaaS taught IT how to write and measure SLAs
IT is back in charge. LOBs cannot
dictate ‘how many servers’ they
need. IT can drive efficiencies again.
14
How these trends intersect
SustainabilitySecurity
Multi-Core
Copper Costs
Global OperationsFaster/Denser StorageEnvironmental Investors
Collaboration
Memory Density
Transport SpeedsWorkload Increases
15
How these trends intersect
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 16
Increased Efficiency, Simpler Operations
UnifiedFabricUnifiedFabric
Unified Fabric and I/OUnified Fabric and I/O
Storage NetworkStorage Network
Mgmt NetworkMgmt Network
Back-End NetworkBack-End Network
Front-End NetworkFront-End Network
BackupNetworkBackupNetwork
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 17
Key Benefits of Unified Fabric
Reduce overall DC power consumption by up to 8%.
Extend the lifecycle of current data center.
Wire hosts once to connect to any network - SAN,
LAN, HPC. Faster rollout of new apps and services.
Every host will be able to mount any storage target.
Drive storage consolidation and improve utilization.
Rack, Row, and X-Data Center VM portability become
possible.
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 18
Networked Resource
The Network Consolidation Effect
Server Architecture Peripheral Network
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 19
Summary
Data Center Ethernet and
FCoE will change the face of
the data center
The network is equally relevant with
servers and storage in the efficient
processing of workload
The network is the key to
unlocking the full potential of
virtualization
© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco ConfidentialPresentation_ID 20© 2007 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Cisco RestrictedDC3 Launch/os