Network and InfrastructureData Center Automation in a New LightBy Tom Schmidt
In most modern data centers today, application management is a major undertaking. Large enterprises may have hundreds to thousands of servers, hosting thousands of applications. For a subset of applications needing specific uptimes, enterprises may deploy traditional high availability clustering. But these applications generally represent less than 10% of the total applications within a data center. While the rest may not have application clustering deployed, end users are still affected if outages occur. For this large application set, most data centers rely on a combination of scripting and monitoring to keep applications available to users. Large companies generally deploy an enterprise monitoring framework to monitor the availability of specific network, server, and application components. This framework provides status and notification to operations staff. In large enterprises, a front-end operations staff monitors the enterprise notification system. This staff is typically capable of receiving monitoring alerts and performing basic troubleshooting and limited corrective actions, which may be as simple as restarting the application or the server. For these actions to occur, however, the operator must be able to log in to the system, perform a basic analysis, and restart the application. This usually involves running scripts designed to stop and then restart the application. Although this sequence sounds simple, it involves significant effort. Compounding the situation is the fact that many enterprises have adopted large-scale shared architectures running complex multi-tier applications across a broad, distributed collection of physical and virtual servers, accessing terabytes of shared storage. If enterprises are to keep up with the relentless growth in demand for data center services while keeping costs under control, they need an automated way to control applications, virtual machines, servers, and storage. As Donna Scott, vice president and distinguished analyst of Gartner Inc., has observed: "As data center management becomes more complex, IT managers struggle to find the right tools to automate business system administration. Enterprises need a consolidated approach that provides both visibility into their health and control for start, stop, and failover." This article looks at one such approach. The scale of the challenge At the same time, IT budgets have remained flat and are just now growing again after significant declines earlier in the decade. According to Gartner, "IT spending as a percentage of revenue will actually decline in some organizations [and] flat IT staff budget plans suggest that organizations are still unwilling to significantly bolster the number of IT professionals in the ranks." Gartner predicts that, by using an approach called Real Time Infrastructure (or RTI, a technology architecture that enables companies to fulfill IT business process, application, and infrastructure requirements from "resource pools" rather than dedicated resources), large organizations will reduce IT hardware costs 10% to 30% and labor costs 30% to 60% while improving quality of service. Real data center automation
Conclusion Tom Schmidt writes frequently about information security topics. He has more than 15 years' experience as a writer and editor in high-tech publishing. |
ADVERTISEMENT Related ContentFast Fact
"As data center management becomes more complex, IT managers struggle to find the right tools to automate business system administration. Enterprises need a consolidated approach that provides both visibility into their health and control for start, stop, and failover." -- Donna Scott, vice president of Gartner Inc. Podcast Audio ContentCIO Strategy Center is now available in audio format. This week's feature topic is: Risks of Wireless EmailPlaytime: 8 min 23 sec |