Virtual data center tests utility computing limits

July 30, 2007, 12:58 AM —  Computerworld Canada — 

A pair of utility computing vendors have stress-tested what they claim is the world's largest virtual data center, including 443 CPUs, 920GB of RAM and 47TB of storage.

Layered Technologies and 3Tera were showing off the benchmark results of the virtual data center at an industry event called HostingCon in Chicago on Tuesday. According to the vendors, Layered Technologies set up the virtual data center on 116 commodity servers set up in a grid computing environment running 3Tera's AppLogic operating system.

Using a test called UnixBench, the vendors are trying to show the virtual data center can easily scale from 10 to more than 100 servers without significant performance problems. This should help demonstrate to reluctant IT managers that the utility computing model works, executives said.

"If it's just one four-node grid on the backbone or one large grid, you'll see same level of performance," said Jeremy Suo-Anttila, Layered Technologies' CTO. "There's not the kind of bottlenecks or hotspots you'd see if you were to build this on 128 nodes using a SAN or other virtualization system. The grid architecture was built so it's using local disk storage. You get the linear performance."

Although grid and utility computing approaches have been around for several years, they haven't seen the adoption rates that some predicted. Market researcher IDC Canada, for example, pegs the local market at C$200 million (US$191 million) to C$300 million. Suo-Anttila suggested that some enterprise firms are short-sighted about how they plan their data center builds.

"(This test) is to show you don't have to go and invest in a data center full of hard steel technologies -- the firewalls, the switches, the load balancers," he said. "If you're comparing virtual data center environment using Xen Server or VMware with shared storage, there's a hesitation by some people to adopt it in the market. Typically that's where they see the failure, with shared media . . . It's just putting too much load on one point."

On a grid, however, virtual appliances can be managed so they don't have those points of failure, he added.

Layered Technologies started working on the virtual data center with 3Tera around this time last year and started with a 48-node grid, Suo-Anttila said. That increased substantially after HP debuted a new ProCurve networking switch that allowed the build to reach 128 nodes.

"If you have an application that could blow up overnight due to popularity, this can scale to those needs without panic," he said.

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Sidekick: The Good News & the Bad News
Either way you look at it Microsoft Data Center management did not follow standards or best practices in this failure. In which case it makes me wonder more about the outsourcing of corporate data much less personal data.
- mburton325

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