Snorage by Angus Kidman

If everyone thinks storage is so boring, how come we always want more of it? Angus Kidman dives into the murky world of enterprise storage, covering everything from the best way to manage a storage area network to the wisdom of trying to ban USB keys and iPods. Go on -- you know size matters.

Why a 3D datacentre sounds virtually unpleasant

Posted by Angus Kidman @ 10:12 3 comments

Spending time hanging out in Second Life has convinced me of one thing: very few real-world processes benefit from being replicated by a bunch of avatars.

I'd certainly consider storage and datacentre management to be a prime inclusion on a list of "processes we don't need to see in 3D", but the boffins at IBM Labs have a different point of view.

IBM recently announced that it had developed what amounts to a 3D interface for managing multiple datacentres.

"The 3-D Data Center allows experts to manage data center resources regardless of where they are or when these resources need attention, giving both employees and corporations enhanced productivity and freedom," the press release gushed (with annoying US spelling).

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What's not made clear in this sea of verbiage is just how this 3D approach is any better than existing network management tools.

Corporate datacentres are of necessity complex, but seeing them modelled in a virtual environment doesn't in itself necessarily make them more comprehensible.

"3-D data centers are better able to consolidate the footprint of large numbers of machines only being used at, for instance, 10 percent capacity, to get rid of extraneous machines, and to monitor power and cooling, distribute workload between data centers, and even move processing to cooler sites when weather conditions are unfavorable," the announcement continues, with yet more of that spelling.

Again, though, there's no explanation of why being 3D is any better than a conventional monitoring tool. Sure, it'll look cooler, but are aesthetics really the main issue here?

The case for 3D is put by IBM research technical architect Michael Osias like this: "Viewing information about your datacentre in 2-D text -- even in real time -- only tells a datacentre manager part of the story, because our brains are wired for sight and sound."

Last time I checked, sight worked pretty well for reading 2D screens, and was less likely to make you seasick in the process.

Predictably, one of the other selling points for this concept is that it's more environmentally friendly. Presumably IBM isn't worried by the notion that Second Life (still the most prominent virtual world) is a bit of a carbon hog -- a concept that Linden Lab is keen to dispel but which has persisted nonetheless.

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Talkback 3 comments

    Open your mind to the possibilities Matt -- 29/02/08

    When was the last time you managed a data centre?? or more than 1???

    I can imagine virtually walking through my data centres - seeing the heat plumes (data fed from the integrated building management system) and understanding why this server has had so many disk failures - or following a cable link between servers and switches to see where a kink in the fibre is slowing traffic.

    Imagine being able to walk up to a server - see it is struggling for CPU/Memory/IO or disk and using your finger, drag more resources to the server... or even better to an application on that server....

    Imagine looking at the comms demarctaion point and seeing a DOS attack - following the traffic to the source and target....

    All it takes is a little imagination

    A kink in the fibre... Anonymous -- 29/02/08 (in reply to #320096465)

    is slowing traffic?

    Anyday Anonymous -- 01/09/08

    Wow. I wholeheartedly agree with the previous commenter. What I would give to have a 3D visualisation of the datacentres I work in.

    I don't manage any datacentres, but I work with shared infrastructure inside them, and we have many many clients managed by many different people sharing the same space. Doesn't sound ideal but there are reasons for it, and regardless of the reasons why, I can't think of something more helpful for that scenario than that kind of tool.

    A. Need to rack a bunch of new devices or shift old ones. How do I know it's going to fit? I can write down all the RUs and how large the devices are and add it all up, or, using 3D modelling of the datacentre, I can take into account existing devices, space for cable management systems, splice trays, logical groupings, optimal stacks for airflow and visualise how cables will run between them.

    B. Diagrams are usually done post-installation, easily go out of date etc. I need to know how a series of devices are networked. This is usually done in a spreadsheet mapping ports to other devices, so I need to open multiple spreadsheets referencing multiple devices with many ports, or, I could just turn on the easy to use visualisation of where cables have been laid (one would want this off by default else you might just be looking at a giant spiderweb, it would be perfect if you could turn it on per-device or per rack). Instantly I have the physical network topology.

    C. Someone needs the status of a device checked physically, and they know where it is but they're stuck behind a desk. I happen to be going to the datacentre, but they're not going to give me directions to a device. They could run a bunch of queries in the database to identify the rack location, the RU, which blade it is, or, they could zoom in on the 3d environment, point me to the exact rack, where it is in the rack, which blade it is, and in case I want that info so I don't forget, they don't have to put the query in, they just write down what is in front of them.

    Honestly, I wish we had this right now.

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Angus Kidman

Angus Kidman

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