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Monitoring & Management




                          0
Market Drivers
Overview




 • Legislation (CRC)

 • Cost reduction (maintaining current levels)

 • Changing attitudes – The green message (marketing)

 • Corporate Social Responsibility




                                                        1
6 Zone Data Centre Management
Overview


•   Provides a truly holistic view of the data centre environment by
    bridging the gap between Facilities and IT

•   Monitoring and reporting of energy usage and efficiency from the
    building ‘point of entry’ through to individual Server payload


•   Tailored historical data collection and sophisticated management
    reporting, empowering the client to make informed decisions based on
    accurate data to maintain and improve energy efficiency, reduce costs
    and increase facility resilience

•   Legacy data centre deployments typically show a first year energy
    saving of circa 25-30%, with an ROI of less than 12 months

•   Apportioning of costs over user defined timeframes

•   “Real time” monitoring and alerting




                                                                            2
Data Centre Block Diagram
6 Zone Data Centre Management
                                                                      Zone 1

              Water                                      Power In                           Gas


                                                                                     Zone 2
                                  Main MV / LV Distribution Board (A or B)
                                                                                                 Zone 3

                                                     UPS


                                                           Chillers     CRAC         Back up
Lighting Boilers Fire Security
                                                                                    Generator

                                                 Sub PDU
      Zone 4                Data Hall
                          Environmental
                                                                               Zone 6

                                                                                    Individual
                                                                                     Payloads
                                          Data Rack or                             (per outlet
       Power Monitoring                       Free                                 monitoring)
                                            Standing
       Environmental Monitoring            Equipment
                                                                                                          3
                                                Zone 5
What We Look To Achieve


•   To identify and collect monitoring points in a logical step by step
    process.

•   To monitor energy use from the point of entry to an
    individual Server within the data centre.

•   Consolidate data collection and reporting functions onto a single
    platform for multi department sharing of information, easy analysis
    and interpretation.

•   Provide automated “billing” reports based on Row, Cabinet, POD and
    down to Server level.




                                                                          4
Zone 1
Monitoring Points


   Fiscal Meter
   Point of Entry
   Monitoring Points
   Input fiscal monitoring
   Energy Efficiency Parameters
   None
   Management Energy Reporting
   Billing
   Billing reconciliation
   Basic capacity, [is there enough]
   Basic CO² foot printing




                                       5
Zone 2
Monitoring Points


   LV Switchgear Room
   Monitoring Points
   Input / Output Monitoring
   Energy Efficiency Parameters
   I²T losses [cables, transformer]
   Basic fixed & variable energy overhead
   PUE [Basic, 1st point of IT and Facilities segmentation]
   Management Energy Reporting
   Supporting services costs [by type, UPS, Chiller, CRAC]
   Capacity Planning [Basic]
   Trend Analysis [Basic]
   Carbon foot printing [Basic]
   PUE, DCiE [Basic Monitoring]
   Fixed and variable energy overhead analysis [Basic]
   Asset Management


                                                              6
Zone 3
Monitoring Points

  UPS, Chillers, CRAC’s, Generator, Boiler room, Plant Room
  Monitoring Points
  Distributed monitoring of supporting services
  Chillers, AHU’s, [individual unit monitoring]
  Lighting UPS [input and output efficiency]
  Energy Efficiency Parameters
  I²T losses
  Fixed & variable energy overhead
  External environmental monitoring
  PUE
  Management Energy Reporting
  Individual supporting services costs
  Capacity Planning
  Trend Analysis
  Carbon foot printing
  Dynamic PUE, DCiE [Basic Monitoring]
  Fixed and variable energy overhead analysis
  Phase load balancing
  Asset Management
                                                              7
Zone 4
Monitoring Points

   Data Hall PDU and Branch Circuits
   Monitoring Points
   PDU inputs
   Distributed branch outputs
   Energy Efficiency Parameters
   I²T losses
   Fixed & variable energy overhead
   External environmental monitoring
   PUE
   Management Energy Reporting
   Cost/Profit centre costing
   Individual supporting services costings
   Capacity Planning
    Trend Analysis
   Carbon foot printing
   Dynamic PUE, DCiE [monitoring only]
   Fixed and variable energy overhead analysis
   Phase load balancing
   Asset Management
                                                 8
Zone 5
Monitoring Points

    Data Hall
    Stand Alone Equipment & Data Racks
    Monitoring Points
    Data Hall direct feed equipment, data racks
    Energy Efficiency Parameters
    I²T losses
    Fixed & variable energy overhead
    External rack level environmental
    PUE
    Access and Security
    Monitoring and Control
    Management Energy Reporting
    Cost/Profit centre billing
    Fixed and variable energy overhead analysis
    Individual supporting services costs
    Detailed capacity planning
    Detailed trend analysis,
    Carbon foot printing
    Dynamic PUE, DCiE [Monitoring and Management]
    Phase load balancing
    Cooling optimisation
                                                    9
    Detailed asset management
Zone 6
Monitoring Points

   Data Hall
   Dynamic Monitoring of individual payloads
   Monitoring Points
   Data Hall direct feed equipment , individual Server, network equipment
   Energy Efficiency Parameters
   I²T losses
   Fixed & variable energy overhead
   Server level
   Environmental
   PUE
   Access and Security
   Monitoring and Control
   Management Energy Reporting
   Billing individual assets, services, cost/profit centres
   Detailed Capacity Planning
   Detailed Trend Analysis
   Carbon foot printing
   Dynamic PUE, DCiE [Monitoring and Management]
   Fixed and variable energy overhead analysis
   Phase load balancing
   Cooling optimisation
   Phase load balancing                                                     10
   Detailed Asset Management
DCIQ – Top Level Monitoring




                              11
Reporting
Zones 5 & 6

Real time Alarming

Environmental
•   Temperature
•   Humidity
•   Water leakage
•   Air flow
•   Smoke


Power
•   True RM Volts
•   True RMS Amps
•   kVA
•   kW
•   kWhr
•   PF
•   PUE
•   Energy Costs


CO² Tonnage from
    Point of entry, supporting services, individual supporting service
    equipment, group of racks, individual rack, individual Server        12
Analysis and Interpretation




•   Phase balancing
•   Rack abuse by customer SLA’s
•   Energy cost apportionment against:

     – IT process

     – Customer

     – Cost /profit centre
•   Computational process energy use
•   Capacity planning/trend analysis

•   Future energy/cooling for future business expansion




                                                          13
Hot Spot Identification
Cooling Optimisation

•   Increase set point on CRAC Units




•   Reduces energy consumption




                                       14
Interpreting the Data - Power



 • Rack with low power
 •   What services are they
     running?
 •   Can they be switched
     off?
 •   Can they be virtualised?




 • Rack with high power
 •   What equipment is running?
 •   Are they old Servers?
 •   Are the fans always on?
     (check temperature)




                                  15
Interpreting the Data – Per Outlet


• Individual Socket Monitoring
•   Cost analysis per payload

•   Full range of parameters

•   Analyse individual payload parameters

•   Apportion cost/carbon usage at server level

•   Attribute services/cost at departmental level

•   Automatic inclusion of suppliers margin when
    generating reports




                                                    16
Per Outlet Reporting




                       17
Platform Technology - Strategy



• Increases resilience by removing electronics from the strip

• Significantly reduces IP address count and therefore costs

• Provides additional benefits i.e. sensors,inputs, outputs and
  physical security

• Modular solution that allows from 2 – 24 power strips to be
  monitored from a single IP address

• Can manage from 16A – 63A solutions in single and three
  phase formats

• Can monitor legacy dumb power strips and stand alone
  solutions



                                                                  18
Intelligent Power Strips
Low Risk, High Resilience & Accurate
 • Monitored, Monitored and Controlled, individual outlet monitoring

 • True RMS Volts, Amps, kVA, kWHr, Power Factor and Frequency

 • +/- 2% accuracy, better than 1% at the outlet

 • Custom colours and specification, full C.A.D. capabilities

 • Individually fused and power on neon indicators

 • Remote power cycling, Sequential power-up against inrush current.

 • Wide range of outlet socket types

 • 0 or 1 U rack mounting (vertical or 19” horizontal mount)

 • Available in 10, 13, 16, 32 and 63 Amp load ratings, single and
   three phase

 • Optional circuit breaker (16A / 32A). Allows all outlets to be isolated
   at the power strip.

 All Power Strips are not created equal
 • Minimal intelligence located within the PDU means greater reliability

 • External PSU’s

 • Accuracy / calibration

 • Quantity of information

 • Ultrasonic welding

 • 3 stage testing and quality process                                       19
PRODUCT SETS




               20
The Management Platform Range
Per Server, Per Cabinet, Per Row, Per Room..




                                                                                       Yes
                                                                                       Yes
      12




                                                                                        Door Access Control
                                                                                        Door Access Control
                                            Eagle-i       Eagle-i + Expansion Module




                                                                                                Yes
                                                                                                Yes
Sensor Ports
     6
     6




                                 Hawk-i 3




                                                                                       No
                                                                                       No
      2
      2




                 PowerHawk2




                    2             4                   6   24
               Monitored PDU’s and CL-Amp                                                   21
Platform Technology
Unrivalled Scalability & Future Proofing




                                                                          LCD
                                                                          Status
                                                                          Display



           12x
           Sensors


4x                                                                 2 x Keypad
Outputs                                                            or 2 x Card
                                                                   Reader

          Expandable ports for Power Strips, CL-Amp, Dual In-Line Units
Standards


   BSI Working group TCT7-3 ‘Telecommunications Installation
   requirements, Facilities and Infrastructure’

   Current work on the following Draft Specification

   EN 50600 Data Centre facilities and infrastructure

   .1           General concepts
   .2           Building construction
   .2.2         Power distribution
   .2.3         Environmental control
   .2.4         Telecom cabelling infrastructure
   .2.5         Security systems
   .2.6         Management and operation information

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6 Zone Overview Compatibility Mode

  • 2. Market Drivers Overview • Legislation (CRC) • Cost reduction (maintaining current levels) • Changing attitudes – The green message (marketing) • Corporate Social Responsibility 1
  • 3. 6 Zone Data Centre Management Overview • Provides a truly holistic view of the data centre environment by bridging the gap between Facilities and IT • Monitoring and reporting of energy usage and efficiency from the building ‘point of entry’ through to individual Server payload • Tailored historical data collection and sophisticated management reporting, empowering the client to make informed decisions based on accurate data to maintain and improve energy efficiency, reduce costs and increase facility resilience • Legacy data centre deployments typically show a first year energy saving of circa 25-30%, with an ROI of less than 12 months • Apportioning of costs over user defined timeframes • “Real time” monitoring and alerting 2
  • 4. Data Centre Block Diagram 6 Zone Data Centre Management Zone 1 Water Power In Gas Zone 2 Main MV / LV Distribution Board (A or B) Zone 3 UPS Chillers CRAC Back up Lighting Boilers Fire Security Generator Sub PDU Zone 4 Data Hall Environmental Zone 6 Individual Payloads Data Rack or (per outlet Power Monitoring Free monitoring) Standing Environmental Monitoring Equipment 3 Zone 5
  • 5. What We Look To Achieve • To identify and collect monitoring points in a logical step by step process. • To monitor energy use from the point of entry to an individual Server within the data centre. • Consolidate data collection and reporting functions onto a single platform for multi department sharing of information, easy analysis and interpretation. • Provide automated “billing” reports based on Row, Cabinet, POD and down to Server level. 4
  • 6. Zone 1 Monitoring Points Fiscal Meter Point of Entry Monitoring Points Input fiscal monitoring Energy Efficiency Parameters None Management Energy Reporting Billing Billing reconciliation Basic capacity, [is there enough] Basic CO² foot printing 5
  • 7. Zone 2 Monitoring Points LV Switchgear Room Monitoring Points Input / Output Monitoring Energy Efficiency Parameters I²T losses [cables, transformer] Basic fixed & variable energy overhead PUE [Basic, 1st point of IT and Facilities segmentation] Management Energy Reporting Supporting services costs [by type, UPS, Chiller, CRAC] Capacity Planning [Basic] Trend Analysis [Basic] Carbon foot printing [Basic] PUE, DCiE [Basic Monitoring] Fixed and variable energy overhead analysis [Basic] Asset Management 6
  • 8. Zone 3 Monitoring Points UPS, Chillers, CRAC’s, Generator, Boiler room, Plant Room Monitoring Points Distributed monitoring of supporting services Chillers, AHU’s, [individual unit monitoring] Lighting UPS [input and output efficiency] Energy Efficiency Parameters I²T losses Fixed & variable energy overhead External environmental monitoring PUE Management Energy Reporting Individual supporting services costs Capacity Planning Trend Analysis Carbon foot printing Dynamic PUE, DCiE [Basic Monitoring] Fixed and variable energy overhead analysis Phase load balancing Asset Management 7
  • 9. Zone 4 Monitoring Points Data Hall PDU and Branch Circuits Monitoring Points PDU inputs Distributed branch outputs Energy Efficiency Parameters I²T losses Fixed & variable energy overhead External environmental monitoring PUE Management Energy Reporting Cost/Profit centre costing Individual supporting services costings Capacity Planning Trend Analysis Carbon foot printing Dynamic PUE, DCiE [monitoring only] Fixed and variable energy overhead analysis Phase load balancing Asset Management 8
  • 10. Zone 5 Monitoring Points Data Hall Stand Alone Equipment & Data Racks Monitoring Points Data Hall direct feed equipment, data racks Energy Efficiency Parameters I²T losses Fixed & variable energy overhead External rack level environmental PUE Access and Security Monitoring and Control Management Energy Reporting Cost/Profit centre billing Fixed and variable energy overhead analysis Individual supporting services costs Detailed capacity planning Detailed trend analysis, Carbon foot printing Dynamic PUE, DCiE [Monitoring and Management] Phase load balancing Cooling optimisation 9 Detailed asset management
  • 11. Zone 6 Monitoring Points Data Hall Dynamic Monitoring of individual payloads Monitoring Points Data Hall direct feed equipment , individual Server, network equipment Energy Efficiency Parameters I²T losses Fixed & variable energy overhead Server level Environmental PUE Access and Security Monitoring and Control Management Energy Reporting Billing individual assets, services, cost/profit centres Detailed Capacity Planning Detailed Trend Analysis Carbon foot printing Dynamic PUE, DCiE [Monitoring and Management] Fixed and variable energy overhead analysis Phase load balancing Cooling optimisation Phase load balancing 10 Detailed Asset Management
  • 12. DCIQ – Top Level Monitoring 11
  • 13. Reporting Zones 5 & 6 Real time Alarming Environmental • Temperature • Humidity • Water leakage • Air flow • Smoke Power • True RM Volts • True RMS Amps • kVA • kW • kWhr • PF • PUE • Energy Costs CO² Tonnage from Point of entry, supporting services, individual supporting service equipment, group of racks, individual rack, individual Server 12
  • 14. Analysis and Interpretation • Phase balancing • Rack abuse by customer SLA’s • Energy cost apportionment against: – IT process – Customer – Cost /profit centre • Computational process energy use • Capacity planning/trend analysis • Future energy/cooling for future business expansion 13
  • 15. Hot Spot Identification Cooling Optimisation • Increase set point on CRAC Units • Reduces energy consumption 14
  • 16. Interpreting the Data - Power • Rack with low power • What services are they running? • Can they be switched off? • Can they be virtualised? • Rack with high power • What equipment is running? • Are they old Servers? • Are the fans always on? (check temperature) 15
  • 17. Interpreting the Data – Per Outlet • Individual Socket Monitoring • Cost analysis per payload • Full range of parameters • Analyse individual payload parameters • Apportion cost/carbon usage at server level • Attribute services/cost at departmental level • Automatic inclusion of suppliers margin when generating reports 16
  • 19. Platform Technology - Strategy • Increases resilience by removing electronics from the strip • Significantly reduces IP address count and therefore costs • Provides additional benefits i.e. sensors,inputs, outputs and physical security • Modular solution that allows from 2 – 24 power strips to be monitored from a single IP address • Can manage from 16A – 63A solutions in single and three phase formats • Can monitor legacy dumb power strips and stand alone solutions 18
  • 20. Intelligent Power Strips Low Risk, High Resilience & Accurate • Monitored, Monitored and Controlled, individual outlet monitoring • True RMS Volts, Amps, kVA, kWHr, Power Factor and Frequency • +/- 2% accuracy, better than 1% at the outlet • Custom colours and specification, full C.A.D. capabilities • Individually fused and power on neon indicators • Remote power cycling, Sequential power-up against inrush current. • Wide range of outlet socket types • 0 or 1 U rack mounting (vertical or 19” horizontal mount) • Available in 10, 13, 16, 32 and 63 Amp load ratings, single and three phase • Optional circuit breaker (16A / 32A). Allows all outlets to be isolated at the power strip. All Power Strips are not created equal • Minimal intelligence located within the PDU means greater reliability • External PSU’s • Accuracy / calibration • Quantity of information • Ultrasonic welding • 3 stage testing and quality process 19
  • 22. The Management Platform Range Per Server, Per Cabinet, Per Row, Per Room.. Yes Yes 12 Door Access Control Door Access Control Eagle-i Eagle-i + Expansion Module Yes Yes Sensor Ports 6 6 Hawk-i 3 No No 2 2 PowerHawk2 2 4 6 24 Monitored PDU’s and CL-Amp 21
  • 23. Platform Technology Unrivalled Scalability & Future Proofing LCD Status Display 12x Sensors 4x 2 x Keypad Outputs or 2 x Card Reader Expandable ports for Power Strips, CL-Amp, Dual In-Line Units
  • 24. Standards BSI Working group TCT7-3 ‘Telecommunications Installation requirements, Facilities and Infrastructure’ Current work on the following Draft Specification EN 50600 Data Centre facilities and infrastructure .1 General concepts .2 Building construction .2.2 Power distribution .2.3 Environmental control .2.4 Telecom cabelling infrastructure .2.5 Security systems .2.6 Management and operation information