Some time ago, container based data centers got good attention
because of its time to market, availability of high power density and focused
cooling. As recent as last December, Tier-1 indicated that there is little traction
by this technology. Lately, a lot of
buzz on this subject are in the media and from people I meet, including a 20
feet container recently announced from HP, VMware
and ones mentioned in here.
There are several vendors providing container based DCs, including:
- HP
- IBM
- Verrari
- Sun/Oracle
- SGI
The benefits of container based DCs include:
- Short time to market
- Availability of dense server (and
therefore, power) concentration
- Savings of packing materials, such as
boxes, extra power cords and so on
Some vendor put up to 22 racks of 42U (924 1U) servers. If you put
blade servers instead, you could pack several thousands of servers per
container with effective cooling. Because it is already set up as a mini DC,
time to market is very short and you do not need to unpack each server box to
get rid of empty boxes and extra power and networking cords.
As I mentioned, with some exceptions like Microsoft and Google, the
market traction for this technology has been slow because many people consider
this technology being only for large data center operators. I have informally solicited
for opinions from several data center experts. There was almost 50-to-50 split
between positive and negative opinions. The people with negative opinions claim
this type of solutions only work for large DC operators and they are not large
in number. Initially, I was in the same opinion. But after talking to two
experts with positive opinions, I am beginning to change my stance, although I
am not totally convinced yet.
The positive opinion is summarized as follows:
- Because of the capital crunch and time
to market, more and more enterprises are moving towards co-location
- Co-location/Whole Sale DC operators
are becoming bigger by acquisition and other means to exploit economies of
scale
- Cloud computing will accelerate the
above two trends
- Containers are not property but
equipment and thus, are not subject to property tax. They can be placed
anywhere, including rooftops and parking lots, eliminating the need for large
space to accommodate large IT loads.
The largest negative factor on the container based DCs is the granularity.
Only large operators can use the container based DCs is limited in number. As
the proliferation of cloud computing continues, more and more enterprises will
move their roll your own DCs to DC operators’ sites for time to market and
cost. This trend will make DC operators bigger and consequently; let economies
of scale work well. For small players, a container-full of servers are too big
to deal with but for large operators, the container may become a reasonable
building block. Based on some conversation with a DC expert, fortune 500-1,000
companies are beginning to move to cloud computing type computing and this is
actually happening.
Finally, not all the container based DCs are made in the same manner.
Some are good and others are not that great.
All of these data and information make me research further on the
container based data centers. More to
come…..